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Cncpclopaetita Brttanntta OR, A

DICTIONARY OF

ARTS, SCIENCES, AND MISCELLANEOUS LITERATURE; ENLARGED AND IMPROVED. THE FIFTH EDITION,

jdustcateti toiti) nearlg sir tjuntireti Cngrabings. VOL. xx.

INDOCTI DISCANT; AMENT MEMINISSE PER1TI.

EDINBURGH : Printed at the Encyclopedia Press, FOR ARCHIBALD CONSTABLE AND COMPANY, AND THOMSON BONAR, EDINBURGH GALE, CURTIS, AND FENNER, LONDON ; AND THOMAS WILSON AND SONS, YORK.

1815.

ENCYCLOPEDIA BRITANNICA.

Suicide.

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UICIDE, the crime of felf-murder, or the perfon •who commits it. We have often wifhed to fee a hiftory of crimes drawn up by a man of ability and refearch. In this hiftory we would propofe that the author fliould defcribe the crimes peculiar to different nations in the different ftages of fociety, and the changes which they undergo in the progrefs of civilization. After having arranged the hiftorical fafts, he might, by comparing them with the religifin and the knowledge of the people, deduce fome important general conclufions, which would lead to a difcovery of the caufe of crimes, and of the remedy moft proper to be applied. Some crimes are peculiar to certain ftages of fociety, fome to certain nations, &c. i Suicide is one of thofe crimes which we are led to beSuicide among the lieve not common among favage nations. The firft inJews. ftances of it recorded in the Jewifh hiftory are thofe of Saul and Ahitophel 5 for we do not think the death of Samfon a proper example. We have no reafon to fuppofe that it became common among the Jews till their wars with the Romans, when multitudes flaughtered themfelves that they might not fall alive into the hands of their enemies. But at this period the Jews were a moft defperate and abandoned race of men, had corrupted the religion of their fathers, and rejedled that pure fyftem which their promifed Mefliah came to Jerufalem to announce. a Among the When it became remarkable among the Greeks, w’e Greeks. have not been able to difcover j but it was forbidden by Pythagoras, as we learn from Athenseus, by Socrates and Ariftotle, and by the Theban and Athenian laws. In the earlieft ages of the Roman republic it was feldom committed but when luxury and the Epicurean and Stoical philofophy had corrupted the fimplicity and virtue of the Roman chara£ler ; then they began to feek fhelter in fuicide from their misfortunes or the effe&s of their own vices. 3 The BraThe religious principles of the bramins of India led mins and them to admire fuicide on particular occafions as honourGentoos. able. Accuftomed to abftinence, mortification, and the contempt of death, they confidered it as a mark of weaknefs of mind to fubmit to the infirmities of old age. We are informed that the modern Gentoos, who ftill in moft things conform to the cuftoms of their anceftors, when old and infirm, are frequently brought to the banks of rivers, particularly to thofe of the Ganges, that they may die in its faered ftreams, which thev believe VOL.'XX. Parti.

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can wafli away the guilt of their fins. But the maxims, Smndc. ^ of the bramins, which have encouraged this pra&ice, we Sunilon,~ are affured by Mr Hoi well, are a corruption of the ?hn Rha^ do&rines of the Shaftah, which pofitively forbid fuicide vol. ii. under the fevereft puniftunent. The praflice which Hoi™ell's religion or affeftion has eftabliftied among the Gentoos, for women at the deatli of their hulhands to burn them- acc< ^ ^ felves alive on the funeral pile, we do not think ought to be confidered as fuicide, as we are not anxious to extend the meaning of the wrord j for were we to extend it thus far, it would be as proper to apply it to thofe who cboofe rather to die in battle than make their efcape at the expence of their honour. Ihus we fhould condemn as fuicides the brave Spartans who died at Thermopylae in defence of their country j we ftiould alfo be obliged to apply the fame difgraceful epithet to all thofe well-meaning but weak-minded Chriftians in this ifland, who in the laft century chofe rather to die as martyrs than comply with commands which were not morally w'rong. According to the Gentoo laws, “ it is proper for a woman after her hulband’s death to bum herfelf in the fire with his corpfe. Every woman who thus burns lhall remain in paradife with her hufband three crore and fifty lacks of years. If ftie cannot, (lie muft in that cafe preferve an inviolable ckaftity. If Ihe remain chafte, fhe goes to paradife 5 and if ihe do not preferve her chaftity, ihe goes to hell.” 4 A cuftom ftmilar to this prevailed among many na-Amon.S tions on the continent of America. When a chief died, fioj,ertj'on'>J a certain number of his wives, of his favourites, and of America. his flaves, were put to death, and interred together with him, that he might appear with the fame dignity in his future ftation, and be waited upon by the fame attendants. This perfuafion is fo deeply rooted, that many of their retainers offer themfelves as vi£lims j and the fame cuftum prevails in many of the negro nations in Africa. 5 If we can believe the hiftorians of Japan, voluntary Japa> death is common in that empire. The devotees of the116*®’ anc‘ idol Amida drown themfelves in his prefence, attended by their relations and friends, and feveral of the pritfts, who all confider the devoted perfon as a faint who isRaynal't gone to everlafting happinefs. Such being the fuppofed honours appropriated to a voluntary death, it is not prifing that the Japanefe anxioufly eheriih a contempt of^,-^, voi, i. life. Accordingly it is a part of the education of their children u to repeat poems in which the virtues of their

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Suicide, anceftors are celebrated, an utter contempt of life is inculcated, and fuicide is fet up as the moft heroic of aftions.” 6

Scythians,

A notion feems alfo to have prevailed among the ancient Scythian tribes, that it was pufillanirnous and ignoble for a man whofe ftrength was wafted with difeafe or infirmity, fo as to be ufelefs to the community, to continue to live. It was reckoned an heroic aflion voluntarily to feek that death which he had not the good fortune to meet in the field of battle. Perverfion of moral feeling does not fpring up, we hope, fpontaneoufly in any nation, but is produced by fome peculiarities of fituation. A wandering people like the Scythians, who roamed about from place to place, might often find it impoflible to attend the fick, or to fupply from their precarious ftore the wants of the aged and infirm. The aged and infirm themfelves, no longer able to fupport the chara£l:e.r of warriors, would find themfelves unhappy. In this way the pra&iee of putting to death fuch perfons as were ufelefs to the community might originate, and afterwards be inculcated as honourable j but he who put an end to his infirmities by his own hand, obtained a chara&er ftill more illuftrious. 7 The tribes of Scandinavia, which worlhipped Odin and, Scandinavians. the “ father of {laughter,” were taught, that dying in the field of battle was the moft glorious event that could befal them. This was a maxim fuited to a warlike nation. In order to eftablilh it more firmly in the mind, all were excluded from Odin’s feaft of heroes who died a natural death. In Afgardia flood the hall of Odin ; where,'feated on a throne, he received the fouls of his departed heroes. This place was called Valhalla, figbifying “ the hall of thofe who died by violence.” Natural death being thus deemed inglorious, and punilhed with exclufion from Valhalla the paradife of Odin, he who could not enjoy death in the field of battle was led to feek it by bis own hands when ficknefs or old age began to aflail him. In fuch a nation fuicide muft have been very common. 8 It prevail- As fuicide prevailed much in the decline of the Roed much in man empire, when luxury, licentioufnefs, profligacy, the decline and falfe philofophy, pervaded the -world, fo it contiof the Roto prevail even after Chriftianity was eftablifhed. man em- nued The Romans, when they became converts to Chriftianipire. ty, did not renounce their ancient prejudices and falfe opinions, but blended them with the new religion which they embraced. The Gothic nations alfo, who fubverted the Roman empire, while -they received the Chriftian religion, adhered to many of their former opinions and manners. Among other criminal practices which were retained by the Romans and their conquerors, that of fuieide was one ; but the principles from which it proceeded were explained, fo as to appear more agreeable to the new fyftem which they had efpoufed. It was committed, either to fecure from the danger of apoftafy, to procure the honour of martyrdom, or to preferve the crown of virginity. 9 When we defcend to modern times, we lament to Too common in mo- find fo many inftances of fuicide among the moft polifhdern times, nations, who have the beft opportunities of knowing but not ed more fo in the atrocity of that unnatural crime. The Englifh have England long been reproached by foreigners for the frequent than in o- com million of it •, and the “ gloomy month of Novemther coun- ber” has been ftigrnatized as the feafon when it is moft tri.es. common. ' But this difgraceful imputation, -we think,

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may be juftly attributed, not to the greater frequency Suicide, / of the crime in England than in other places, but to the 1 V cuftom of publifhing in the newfpapers every inftance of fuicide which is known. Mr Moore, who lately publifhed a full inquiry into this fubjeft, was at great pains to obtain accurate information concerning the perpetration of this crime in different countries. Mercier, Mercier's who wrote in 1782, fays, that the annual number of Tableau de filicides in Paris was then about 150. He does not tell Parls' us how he came by the information ; but we have the xiie numauthority of the Abbe Fontana for afferting, that more her of fuiperfons put an end to their lives in Paris than in Lon-cj^es in f’adon. The Abbe had this information from the lieutenant of the police. Mr Moore was informed by one neVa of the principal magiftrates of Geneva, that in that ci- according ty, which contains about 25,000 inhabitants, the ave-1° the heft rage number of filicides is about eight. The averageaccounts* number of filicides, from what caufe foever, for the laft 28 years, has been 3 2 each year for London, Southwark, and Weftminfter. In Edinburgh, which contains 80,000 inhabitants, we are convinced the average number of filicides does not exceed four. Mr Moore found, from the accounts with which he was favoured by the feveral coroners of the county of Kent, that for the laft 18 years the number has been upwards of 32 each year. Kent is fuppofed to contain 200,000 inhabitants, and London 800,000. It is eafy therefore to fee, that in the metropolis many inftances of filicide muft occur which are never the fubjeft of legal inquiry, and confequently never made known to the world. Whereas in the country towns and villages of Kent it is fcarcely poflible to conceal fuch an a&ion as felf-murder from the knowledge of the whole neighbourhood. The calculation therefore refpefling Kent we may receive as true, while we muft increafe the average number in London very confiderably. Mr Moore computes the average number of filicides in England every year at a thoufand j but the principles on which he founds this opinion are fo imperfedt and vague, that we do not think it can be depended on as coming near the truth. „ It might lead to fome interefting conclufions to com- In what pare together, not only the number of filicides in differ-rank an that the laid century, becaufe he unexpededly cured a_ noble- devil can raife ftorms, produce infefts, and act upon the Manche/ler man of the gout. Difeafes were imputed to fafcmation, animal fpirits and imagination j and, in fine, that he is Tranfacand hundreds of poor wretches were dragged to the an excellent optician and natural philofopher on account tions, flake for being acceffary to them. Mercatus, phyhcian of his long experience. Dr Johnfon, the leviathan of vol. iii. to Philio II, of Spain, a writer of uncommon accuracy literature, is fuppofed to have believed the fecund fight. and information, appears ftrongly inclined to deny the With refped to the effedts of fuperftition on the huexiftence of fafcinatory difeafes: but he is conftrained man mind, they are indeed deplorable. It cnainsdown to acknowledge them for two reafons ; ift, Becaufe the the underftanding, and finks it into the moll abjedt and inquifition had decided in favour of their reality ; 2dly, fordid ftate, and keeps it under the dominion of fear, Becaufe he had feen a very beautiful woman break a and fometimes of cruelty. Where once it takes poffeffteel-mirror to pieces, and blaft fome trees by a angle fion, it has a tendency to become extreme, and generglance of her eyes. ally becomes fo intolerable, that men of refledtion and As the opinions concerning the caufe of difeafes were learning confpire its deftrudlion. ihe Chriftian iclifuperftitious, thofe concerning the method ot curing gion gave a violent {hock to the heathen fuperftition, them were not lefs fo. In the Odyffey we read of a the reformation in a great meafure demolifiled the fucure performed by a fong. Jofephus relates, that he perftition of the church of Rome j and the fuperftition faw a certain Jew, named Eleaxar, draw the devil out which remained among Proteftants after their reparation of an old woman’s noftrils by the application of Solo- from that church has been gradually yielding to the inmon’s feal to her nofe in prefence of the emperor Vei- fluence of enlightened reafon, or to the bold and daring pafian. Many different kinds of applications were uted attacks of infidelity and deifm. We behold the proffor expelling the devil. Flagellation fometimes fuc- pedt of its ruins with pleafure, and thank the deifts for ceeded admirably *, purgatives and antifpafmodics were their zeal j but it is from the firm hope that the religion other modes of difcharging him. Dr Mynfight cured of Jefus will arife in all its beauty and fimple majefty, feveral bewitched perfons with a plafter of affafoetida. and be admired and refpedled as it deferves : for mean Flow the affafoetida was fo efficacious, was much dii- and contemptible as fuperftition certainly is, we would nuted. Some thought the devil might confider fo vile rather fee men do wnat they reckon their dutj fiom fuan application as an infult, and run off in a paffion ; but perftitious principles, than fee anarchy and vice prevail, others very fagely obferved, that as devils are fuppoied even though attended with all the knowledge and lito have eyes and ears, it is probable they may have nofes berality of fentiment which deilm and infidelity can infpire. t0 Nor was it only in medicine thefe fuperftitious opiSUPERVISOR, a furveyor or overfeer. nions were entertained •, they prevailed alfo in,natural SUPINATION, in Anatomy, the adlion of a fupinaphilofophy. The pernicious effeRs in mines, which we tor mufcle, or the motion whereby it turns the hand fonow know are occafloned by noxious air, were confithe palm is lifted up towards heaven. dently imputed to the demons of the mine. Even Van as that SUPINE, in Latin grammar, part of the conjugation Helmont, Bodinus, Strozza, and Luther, attributed thunder and meteors to the devil. Chemifts were em- of a verb, being a verbal fubftantive of the Angular nunv ber and the fourth declenfion. ployed for centuries in fearch of the philofopher’s flone, There are two kinds of fupines : one, called, the/#/ with which they were to do miracles. It was a comJupine, ending in wn of the accufative cafe, which is almon queftion among philofophers in the 17th century, whether the imagination could move external obje£is ? ways of an adlive fignification, and follows a verb of motion j as abiit deambulatum. The other called the A queftion generally decided in the affirmative. Iqfl Jupine, and ending in u ©f the ablative cafe, is of a Though fuperftition be generally the mark of a weak paffive fignification, and is governed by fubftantives or mind, fuch is the infirmity of human nature, that we adjedlives \ zs, facile diblu, &c. find many inftances of it among men of the moft fublime TheyJ have their name, fays Probus, and after him genius-and moft enlightened minds. Socrates believed Voflius,

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Voffius, quod ad injlar fitpinorum et Otioforum hominum Supper. ^ omnia habent confufa : or, according to Prifcian, quod nafcantur a participiis pajjivis, qua: iupina appellatu funt, quia in injimo loco Jita, totam conjugationis molem fufciqpiant.

SUPPER, the evening repaft.—Suppers that are heavy (hoold be avoided, becauie the ftomach is more oppreiTed with the (ame quantity of food in a horizontal poflure than in an ereft one, and becaufe digeftion goes on more (lowly when we deep than when we are awake. I hey (hould be eaten long enough before bed-time, that they may be nearly digefted before going to deep; and then a draught of pure water will dilute that which remains in the ftomach. Definition SUPPER of the Lord, other wife called the Eucharifl, is a facrament ordained by Chrift in his church, of which the outward part is bread and wine, and the inward part or thing fignified the body and blood of Chrift, which the majority of Chriftians believe to be in fome fenfe or other taken and received by the faithful communicants. See SACRAMENT. Controver- There is no ordinance of the gofpel which has been fies about the fubjeft of mure violent controverdes between difthe outward and ferent churches, and even between different divines of Vifible fign. the fame church, than this facrament 5 and though all confefs that one purpofe of its inftitution was to be a bond of love and union among Chriftians, it has, by the perverfenefs of mankind, been too often converted into an occalion of hatred. The outward and vifible fign, and the inward and fpiritual grace, have equally afforded matter of difputation to angry controvertifts. Many members of the church of Rome condemn the Greek church and the Proteftants for ufing leavened bread in the Lord’s Supper, contrary to the example fet them by our Saviour •, whilft the Greek church in general, and fome Proteftant focieties in particular, \inite with the church of Rome in cenfuring all churches which mix not the wine with water, as deviating improperly from primitive praftice. See EUCHARIST. That it was unleavened bread which our Lord bleffed and brake and gave to his difciples as his body, cannot be queftioned 5 for at the time of the paffover, when (this ordinance was inftituted, there was no leavened bread to be found in Jemfalem *. For the mixed cup, * Exod. xii. 15, ip, the evidence is not fo decifive. It is indeed true, as we have obferved under the article EUCHARIST, that the primitive Chriftians ufed wine diluted with water; and if we may believe Maimonides f, it was the general In Mi/h cuftom of the.Jews, as well at the paffover as at their -nam. ordinary meals, to add a little water to their wine on account of its great (Length ; but that this was always done, or that it was done by our Saviour in particular, there is no clear evidence. Origen indeed affirms f, 1$ Horn, X2, in Hiere- that our Lord adminiftered in wine unmixed 5 and he miam. was not a man to hazard fuch an affirmation, had there been in his days any certain tradition, or fo much as a general opinion, to the contrary. On this account we have often heard with wonder the neceflity of the mixed cup infifted on by thofe who without hefitation make ufe of leavened bread ; for if it be effential to the facrament that the very fame elements be employed by

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us that were employed by our Saviour, the neceflity of Supper, unleavened bread is certainly equal to that of wine di— luted by water. But the mixed cup is faid to be emblematical of the blood and water which flowed from the fide of our Lord when pierced by the fpear of the Roman foldier, while the abfence of leaven is emblematical of no particular circumftance in His paflion. This argument for the mixture is as old as file era of St Cyprian, and has fince been frequently urged with triumph by thofe w'ho furely perceived not its weaknefs. The flowing of the blood and water from our Saviour’s fide was the confequence either of the fpear’s having pierced the pericardium, or more probably of an afcites or hydrothorax, occafioned by his cruel and lingering death (fee MEDICINE, N° 34343)* -But: whatever was the caufe of it, how can the mixing of wine with water in the facrament be emblematical of the flowing of blood and water feparately ? Such a mixture furely bears a more ftriking refemblance to the reunion of the ferum and craffamentum, after they had been feparated by whatever caufe. See BLOOD.

We urge not thefe obje&ions to the mixed cup from any diflike that wTe have to the praftice. It is unqueftionably harmlefs and primitive *, and we wifli that greater regard were paid to primitive pradtices than the generality of Chriftians feem to think they can claim : .3 but let the advocates for antiquity be confident; let riVOlOU5, them either reftore, together with the mixed cup, the ufe of unleavened bread, or acknowledge that neither the one nor the other is effential to the facrament. This laft acknowledgement muft indeed be made, if they would not involve themfelves in difficulties from which they cannot be extricated. If either the mixed cup or unleavened bread be abfolutely neceffary to the validity of the facrament, why not wine made from the grapes of Judeca ? why not that particular kind of wine which was ufed by our Saviour ? and where is that wine to be found ? But the controverfies reipedling the outward part or About the fign of the Lord’s Supper are of little importance when ’Ung figcompared with thofe which have been agitated refpedting the inward part or thing fignified ; and of thefe we haften to give as comprehenfive a view as the limits prefcribed to fuch articles will admit. Our Bleffed Lord, in the fame night that he was betrayed, 4 tooK. bread, and blefled it, and brake it, and gave it to the difciples, and faid, Take, eat ; this is my body. And he took the cup, and gave thanks, and gave it to them, faying, Drink ye all of it; for this is my blood of the new teftament, which is (hed for many for the remiflion of fins.” Such was the inftitution of the Lord’s Supper as it is recorded in the gofpel by St Matthew ; and we have the fame account of it, in almoft the very fame words, by three other infpired writers, St Paul, St Mark, and St Luke. i hat it was the bread which Chrift bleffed and brake that is here called his body, and the wine over which he gave thanks that he ftyles his blood of the new teftament, will admit of no reafonable doubt (A) ; but in what fenfe they became fo, has been the fubje^I of many controverfies. The church of Rome, which holds, that after confe-Do(qrine of cration, the church of Rome.

Some over-zealous Proteftants have indeed affirmed, that it was not the confemted bread and wine, but thofe

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cration, Jefus Chrift, God and man, is reaLy, truly, and fubflantially, contained under the outward appearances of the bread and wine, informs us, that about the middle of the mafs, when the pried, taking into his hand, firft the bread and then the wine, pronounces over each feparately the facred words of coniecration, the fubftance of thefe elements is immediately changed by the almighty power of God into the body and blood of Chrift ; but that all the outward appearances of the bread and wine, and all their fenfible qualities remain. This more than miraculous change is called TRANSUBST ANT I AT ION ; and is founded on the philofophy of Ariftotle, which refolves all bodies into matter anti form (fee METAPHYSICS, N° 142—150.) 5 for it is only the matter or imperceptible fubftance which fupports the forms or fenftble qualities of bread and wine, that is changed into the fubjlance or matter of the body and blood of Chrift, fo that this divine matter, coming into the place of the former earthly matter, fupports the fame identical/o/wir which it fupported. Hence we are told, “ that Jefus Chrift, now prefect inftead of the bread and wine, exhibits himfelf to us under thofe very fame outward forms or appearances which the bread and wine had before the change.” Could this duorz%rig of one body, or the internal combination of Chrift are really and fubftantially prefent with the its primary parts, differs from that of another ; that bread and wine •, that the body is really and truly eaten, 40Q 'Ger- ’ gold, for inftance, has a different fubfratum or baps and the blood really and truly drunk, by the eommuni-Atf divLoc. from iron, lead, or filver *, that the internal organiza- cants ; and that whatever motion or aftior the bread Theol. de tion or ftrmfture of the body of an ox is different from has, the body has the fame *. According to them,Sacratcen^ G therefore, VOL. XXk Part I,

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therefore, the fame fenfible appearances are exhibited by two fubftances united in fome inexplicable manner, which is neither a perfonal union, nor incorporation, nor the inclofure of the body within the bread ; nor does it lad longer than while the facrament is celebrating. This union is generally called CONSUBSTANTIATIONbut they rejeft the term, contenting themfelves with afferting the real prefence, without prefuming to define the mode by which the body and blood of Chrift are united to the facramental elements. It would be fuperfluous to walte time in replying to this doftrine. Every reader fees that it implies the poffibility of the fame thing’s being whole and entire in a million of places at one and the fame inftant of time, which has been fo often urged as an unanfwerable objeftion to the Romifh doftrine j and it is fraught with this additional abfurdity peculiar to itfelf, that two bodily fubftances may at once occupy the fame place, which is direftly contrary to our notions of folidity. It may be obferved too, that whatever be the real fenfe of our Saviour’s words, he fays exprefsly, “ This is my body”—this thing which I give you, and which you fee and feel} whereas, had he meant what Luther and his followers teach, he would furely have faid, “With this bread receive my body, v)ith this cup receive my blood.” I he notions of fome of the early Calvinifts refpefting the Lord’s Supper are very myfterious, and expreffed in language of which we are not fure that we underftand the meaning. In the year 1561 an attempt was made in France to bring the Catholics and Proteftants to an uniformity of doftrine on this great topic of controverfy 5 and deputies were appointed by both parties to meet at Poi/fy, and debate the queftion in a friendly manner. The principal managers on the fide of the Catholics were the cardinals of Lorraine and Tournon; thofe on the fide of the Proteftants were Beza and Peter Martyr. After feveral meetings, difputes, and violent feparations, the Proteftant deputies declared their faith in the following words ; “ We confefs, that Jefus Chrift, in the Supper, does truly give and exhibit to us the fubftance of his body and blood by the efficacy of his Holy Spirit; and that we do receive and eat fpiritually, and by faith, that very body which was offered and immolated for us, fo as to be bone of his bone and flefti of his flelh, to the end that we may be enlivened thereby, and receive what is conducive to our falvation. And becaufe faith, fupported by the word of God, makes thofe things prefent, which it apprehends, and by that faith we do in deed and reality receive the true rtatural body and blood of Chrift, by the power of the Holy Spirit ; by this means, we confefs and acknowledge the prefence of his body and blood in the Supper.” One of the Catholic delegates txpreffing his difiike of this laft claufe, the Proteftant minifters gave the following explanation of their fentiments : “ No diftance of place can hinder us from communicating of the body and blood of Chrift, for the Lord’s Supper is a heavenly thing ; and though on earth we receive with our mouths bread and wine, which are the true figns of his body and blood, yet by faith, and the efficacy of the Holy Ghoft, our minds, which are fed with this food, are rapt up into heaven, and enjoy the prefence of the body and blood 5 and that by this means it may be faid that the body is truly joined to t&p bread, and the blood to the wine $ but after the

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manner ot a facrament, and not at all according to place Supper, 0 or natural pofition *.” c— If the reader can difeover the precife meaning o{* Thuanus thefe paftages, his fagacity exceeds ours. That the Pro- hb. 28. teftant deputies believed, or profeffed to believe, thatSee alfo, the natural body and blood of Chrift are by the faithful received in the Lord’s Supper, is indeed evident; but Sacrifice, their notions refpefting the manner of this reception are vol. i. very unintelligible, if not con trad i dory. In the former It quotation,^ they confefs that Chrift’s body and blood are.unfntellrreally prelent in the facrament; that they are m. pre-g‘ble' fent by faith (we fuppofe the faith of the communicants) ; and that the very body which was offered arid immolated for us is eaten fpiritually and by faith. In the latter quotation, they feem to fay that thrift’s body and blood are in heaven, at a great diftance from the true figns of them j that on earth the communicants receive only thefe figns, which are bread and wine ; but that, by faith and the efficacy of the Holy Spirit, their minds, during a&ual communion, are rapt up into heaven, where they enjoy the prefence of the body and blood j and that by this means the body and blood are truly joined to the bread and wine through the medium of the mind of the communicant, which is at once prefent both to the fign and to the thing fignified. To this myfterious dodlrine it is needlefs to urge objedlions. Every man who is accuftomed to think, and to ufe words with fome determinate meaning, will at once perceive that the authors of this declaration muft have had very confufed notions of the fubjedl, and have pleafed themfelves with found inftead of fenfe, fatisfied that they could not be wrong if they did not fymbolize with the Lutherans or the Council of Trent. The churches of England and Scotland, in their efta-oft]^ bliffied doftrines refpefting the Lord’s Supper, appear churches of to be Calvimftical j but the compilers of the Thirty-Britain, nine Articles and of the Confeffion of Faith muft have been much more rational divines than Beza and Pete? Martyr. They agree in condemning the do&rine of tranfubftantiation as contrary to common fenfe, and not founded in the word of God ; they teach, that to fuch as rightly, worthily, and with faith, receive the facrament, the bread which we break is a partaking of the body of Chrift, and the cup of bleffing a partaking of the blood of Chrift ; and they add, that the body and blood of Chrift are eaten and drunk, not corporally or carnally, but only after a heavenly and fpiritual manner, by which the communicants are made partakers of all the benefits of his death f. In one important cir-x a f - j cumftance thefe two churches feem to differ. The Con- of the feffion of Faith, as we underftand it J, affirms, that \n Church of the Lord’s Supper there is no facrifice made at all. The 'EnSland* thirty-firft article of the church of England likewife con- art. ~8, f r demns the Popiffi facrifice of the mafs as a blafphemousZn r°f fable, and danger ous deceit y but in the order for the ad- Faith, chap. 2 miniftratwn of the Lord's Supper or Holy Communion, 9the celebrator “ befeeches God moft mercifully to ac. cept the alms and oblations of the congregation,” and again “ to accept their facrifice of praife and thankfgiving. from which petitions many have inferred that, in the Lord s Supper, that church offers a commemorative and euchariftical facrifice. This inference feems not to be wholly without foundation. In the order for the adminiftration of the Lord’s Supper, according to the form of the Book of Common Prayer fet forth by aft of parliament;

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Suppier. Ikment m the fecond and third years of King Edward the Sixth, the elements were folemnly offered to God as a facrifice of praife and thankfgiving; and though the prayer containing that oblation was, at the review of the liturgy fome years afterwards, removed from the prayer of confecration, to which it was originally joined, and placed where it now Hands in the poll communion fervice ; yet the very a£t of parliament which authorized that alteration, calls King Edward’s “ a very godly order, agreeable to the wrord of God and the primitive church, and very comfortable to all good people defiring to live in Chriftian converfation.” 13 Some Eng- The Englifli church, however, has not pofitively delifh divines termined any thing refpedting this great queftion ; and hold the (he condemns the do&rine of the real prefence, Lord’s Sup- whilft with all its dangerous confequences, (he allows her memper to be a eucharif- bers to entertain very different notions of this holy ortical facri- dinance, and to publilh thefe notions to the world. fiee. Accordingly, many of her moft eminent divines (E) have maintained that, in the celebration of the Lord’s Supper, the elements of bread and wine are offered to God as a facrifice commemorative of Chrift’s one facrifice for the fins of the whole world ; that thefe elements, though they undergo no fubftantial change, yet receive fuch a divine virtue by the defcent of the Holy Ghoft, as to convey to the worthy communicant all the benefits of Chriff’s paflion j that they are therefore called his body and blood, becaufe being, after their oblation, eaten and drunk in remembrance of Him, they fupply the place of his body and blood in the feaft upon his facrifice ; and that it is cuftomary with our Saviour to give to any thing the name of another of which it completely fupplies the place, as when he calls himfelf the * St John door * of the (beep, becaufe there is no entrance into x.7. the church or kingdom of God but by faith in him. They obferve, that the Euchariff’s being commemorative, no more hinders it from being a proper facrifice, than the typical and figurative facrifices of the old law hindered them from being proper facrifices : for as to be a type doth not deftroy the nature and notion of a legal facrifice, fo to be reprefentative and commemorative, doth not deftroy the nature of an evangelical facrifice. To prove that, in the celebration of the Lord’s Supper, there is a real facrifice offered to God as well as a facrament received by the communicants, they apf Hei- x'ui. peal to St Paul, who fays exprefsly f, that “ Chriftians have an altar, whereof they have no right to eat who 10. ferve the tabernacle,” and who by contrafting the cup of the Lord with the cup of devils, and the table of the t r Cor. x. Lord with the table of devils^;, teaches plainly, that 16, See. thofe cups and thofe tables had the fame fpecific nature. That the table of devils fpoken of by the apoftle was the Pagan altars, and the cup of devils the wine poured out in libations to the Pagan divinities, will admit of no difpute $ and therefore, fay the advocates for the euchariftical facrifice, the table of the Lord muff be the Chriftian altar, and the cup of the Lord the wine offered to God as the reprefentative of the blood of Chrift ; otherwife there would not be that abfurdity which the apoftle fuppofes, in the fame perfon drinking the cup of the Lord and the cup of devils, and partaking of the

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Lord’s table and the table of devils. They obferve Soppy*. farther, that in all the ancient liturgies extant there is 'r"""¥ a folemn form of oblation of the facramental elements, and that all the Chriftian writers from the fecond century downwards treat of the Lord’s Supper as a facrifice as well as facrificial feaft, having indeed no value in itfelf, but acceptable to God as reprefenting Chrift’s one facrifice for the fins of the world. Our limits will not permit us to give even an abftradt of their arguments $ but the reader who (hall attentively perufe bloody Sacrifice and Altar unveiled andfupported, will difcover that their notions are better founded than probably he fuppofes, and that they are totally irreconcileable with the doftrine of tranfubftantiation and the Popitb facrifice of the mafs. 14 Other Englifb divines of great learning, with the ce-Other?, n lebrated Hoadley biftiop of Winchefter at the head ofj^fj3^*' them, contend ftrenuoully that the Lord’s Supper, fo 1 ’ far from being a facrifice of any kind, is nothing more than bread and wine reverently eaten and drunk, in remembrance that Chrift’s body was broken and his blood fired in proof of his Father’s and his own love to mankind ; that nothing is effential to the facrament but this remembrance, and a ferious defire to honour and obey our Saviour as our head ; that the facrament might be celebrated without uttering one prayer or thankfgiving, merely by a fociety of Chriftians, whether fmall or great, jointly eating bread and drinking wine with a ferious remembrance of Chrift’s death ; that St Paul enjoins a man to examine himfelf before he eat of that bread and drink of that cup, not to difcover what have been the fins of his paft life in order to repent of them, but only that he may be fure of his remembering Chrift’s body broken and his blood (bed ; that, however, it is his duty in that as in every other inftance of religious worfliip to refolve to obey from the heart every precept of the gofpel, whether moral or pofitive ; and that to partake, worthily of the Lord’s Supper is acceptable to God, becaufe it is paying obedience to one of thefe precepts ; but that no particular benefits or prmleges are annexed to it more than to any other inftance of duty. Biftiop Hoadley acknowledges, that when St Paul fays *, * 1 Cor*x> “ The cup of bleffmg which we blefs, is it not the com-16munion of the blood of Chrift ? The bread which we break, is it not the communion of the body of Chrift ?” he has been fuppofed by many learned men to affirm, that all the benefits of Chrift’s paffion are in the Lord’s Supper conveyed to the worthy communicant 5 but this (fays he) is an idea which the apoftle could not have in his thoughts as at all proper for his argument. The Greek word KOWUHCC and the Englifli communion fignify only a partaking of fomething in common with others of the fame fociety j and the apoftle’s meaning (he fays) can be nothing more, than that in the Lord’s Supper we do not eat bread and drink wine as at an ordinary meal, but as memorials of the body and blood of Chrift, in honour to him as the head of that body of which we are all members. That the word xanww* is not meant to denote any inward or fpiritual part of the Lord’s Supper, he thinks evident, becaufe the fame word is ufed with regard to the cup and the table of idols, where no C 2 fpiritual

(E) The archbiftiops Laud and Wake ; the bifhops Poynet, Andrews, Bull, and Patrick } the doctors Hkkes, Gtabe, and Brett j Meflrs Bingham, Johnfon, Mede, Wheatly, Scandaret, Bowyer, &c.

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Supper, fpiritual part could be thought of, and in an argument which fuppofes an idol to be nothing f. v ew Account*1*/ ^'° * ^ie nature and end of the Lord’s the Nature Supper, it muft appear no finall objeflion, that “ he and fold of who eateth and drinketh unworthily is faid to be guilty the Lord's upper.

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body anc{ blood of the Lord, and to eat and drink judgment to himfelf not difcerning the Lord's body.'"

No doubt it would be finful to eat and drink a mere memorial of Chrift’s death without ferious difpolitions j but we cannot conceive how a little rvandering of the thoughts, which is all the unworthinefs which the author thinks there can be on fuch an occafion, fhould be a fin of fo deep a dye as to be properly compared with the guilt of thofe who murdered the Lord of life. Other divines, therefore, feeling the force of this and fimilar obje6Uons, fleer a middle courfe between the mere memorialifi: and the advocate for a real facrifice in the holy Eucharift, and infill; that this rite, though no facrifice

/ f5hcrs’ itfelf, is yet a feaft upon the one facrifice offered by mwSavi-011 and flain upon the crofs. The moft eminent paeur’s facri- trons of this opinion have been Dr Cudworth, Bifhop £ce. Warburton, and the prefent bilhop of Cheiler; and they fupport it by fuch arguments as the following : “ In thofe ages of the world when viflims made fo great a part of the religion both of Jews and Gentiles, the facrifice was always followed by a religious feafting on the thing offered 5 which was called the feajl upon, or after the facrifice, and was fuppofed to convey to the partakers of it the benefits of the facrifice. Now Jefus (fay they), about to ofler himfelf a facrifice on the crofs for our redemption, did, in conformity to general praflice,, inftitute the laf fupper, under the idea of a fenf after theficrifce; and the circumflances attending its inflitution were fuch, they think, that the apoftles could not poffibly miftake his meaning. It was juft before hispaflion, and while he was eating .the pafchal fupper,, which was a Jewifhy£q/? upon the facrifice, that our bleffed Lord inftituted this rite j and as it was his general euftom to allude, in his aftions and expreffions, to what paired before his eyes, or prefented itfelf to his obfervation, who can doubt, when, in the very form of celebration, we fee all the marks of zficrficialfupper, but that the divine inftitutor intended it fhould bear the fame relation to his facrfice on the crofs which the pafchal fupper then celebrating bore to the oblation of the pafchal lamb? If this was not his purpofe, and if nothing more was intended than a general memorial of a dead benefactor,, why was this inftant of time preferred for the inftitution to all others throughout the courfe of his miniftry, any one of which would have been equally commodious ? Indeed any other time would have been more commodious for the inftitution of a mere memorial j for the pafchal lamb and unleavened bread were1 certainly a facrifice ; and the words ufed by our Savi«ur, when he gave the bread and wine to the apoftles, were fuch as muft neceffarily have led them to confider that bread and wine as bearing the fame relation to his facrifice that the pafchal fupper bore to the pafchal facrifice. At that Jewifti feaft, it was the cuftotn of every father of a family to break the unleavened bread, and to give to every gueft a portion, faying, “This is the bread of affliction, which our fathers did eat in the land ©f Egypt:” a cuftom which, we may be fure, that Chrift, as father of his family, would religioully obferve. The apoftles knew well that they were not eat-

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ing the identical bread which their fathers did eat in Suppe.%, Egypt, but the feaft upon the facrifice then offered in v-— commemoration of their redemption from Egyptian bondage } and therefore when they faw their Mafter after fupper break the bread again and give it to each of them, with thefe remarkable words, “ This is my body which is given for you, do this in remembrance of me,” they muft have concluded, that his meaning was to inftitute a rite which fhould to the end of the world bear the fame relation to his facrifice that the pafchal fupper bore to the facrifice of the paffover. This inference, from the circumftances attending the inftitution, Bifhop Warburton thinks confirmed by St Paul’s mode of arguing with the Corinthians, on their impiety and abfurdity in partaking both of the Lord’s table and the table of devils; for “ what (fays he) had the eaters of the facrifices to do with the partakers of the bread and wine in the Lord’s Supper, if the Lord’s Supper was not a feaft of the fame kind with their feafts ? If the three feafts, Jewifh, Pagan, and Chriftian, had not one common nature, how could the apoftle have inferred that this intercommunity was inconfiftent ? ITe CANNOT (fays he) drink the cup of the Lord and the cup

of devils ; ye CANNOT be partakers of the Lord's tabic and the table of devils. For though there might be impiety in the promifcuous ufe of Pagan and Chriftian rites of any kind, yet the inconffency arifes from their hav-

ing a common nature, and confequently, as they had oppofite originals, from their deftroying one another’s effects in the very celebration. Sacrifices, and feafts upon facrifices, were univerfally confidered as federal rites ; and therefore the Lord’s table and the table of devils being federal rites, the fame man could no more be partaker of both, than he could at once engage to ferve both God and the devil. This is the apoftleV argument to the wife men, to whom he appeals 5 and we fee that it turns altogether upon this poftulatum, that the Chriftian and Pagan feafts had the fame fpecific nature, or were both feafts upon facrifices. If this be admitted, it is eafy to fee why St Paul deemed thofe who ate and drank unworthily guilty of the body and blood of the Lord ; for if the Lord’s Supper be a feaft upon his facrifice, it muft have been confidered as the means of conveying to the communicants all the benefits of his death and paffion ; and the profanation of fuch a rite, by rendering his death ineffeftual, might be fitly compared and juftly equalled to the enormous guilt of thofe by whom his blood was fhed.” In reply to Bifhop Hoadley’s remarks upon the word xouunu. In’s brother biftiop obferves, that “ had the apoftle meant what the learned writer makes him to mean, he would doubtlefs have faid xoivamct vpuv us TO crupa, ‘ your communion in the body—your eating it jointly.’ St Paul (continues he) knew how to exprefs himfelf properly, as appears from a paffage in his epiftle to the Philippians, where, profeffedly fpeaking of the joint participation of a bleffing, he ufes thefe words, HOIVMVIX vpav us TO tvxyytXicV} * your communion in the gofpel.’ To the other remark,, that no fpiritual part could be thought of in the table of idols, becaufe an idol is faid by the apoftle to be nothing, Bifhop Warburton replies, “ that by St Paul the Gentiles are faid to have facrificed to devils, and thofe who ate of fuch facrifices to have had communion with devils : now the devil (continues his Lordfhip) was in St Paul’s opinion fomething." But the inference which the

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the apoftle draws from the acknowledged truth^ that the cup of bleffing which we blefs is the communion oi Suppofition the blood of Chrift, and the bread which we break the communion of the body of Chrift, puts his meaning, our author thinks, beyond all doubt. He fays , that the * i Cor- x. partaking of one bread makes the receivers of many to 37become one body- A juft inference, if this rite be of the nature of a feaji upon the facrifice; for then the communion of the body and blood of unites the receivers into one body by an equal diftribution of one common benefit. But if it be only a general commemoration of a deceafed benefaftor, it leaves the receivers as it found them, not one body, but many feparate profeffors of one common faith. . iG The ordi- Thus have we given fuch a view as our limits would nance not permit us to give, of the principal opinions that have generally mnderftood, been held refipefting the nature and end of the Lord’s Supper. It is an ordinance which feems not to be generally underftoodthough, being intended to ^°'v forth the Lord’s death till he come, it is iurely of tuffiicient importance to engage the attention of every ferious Chriftian. The moft confiderable Proteftant divines who have exprefsly written upon it are, Johnfon in his Unbloody Sacrifice ; Cudworth in his Difcourfe concerning the true Nature of the Lord's Supper ; Hoadley in his Plain Account; and Warburton in his Rational Account. The notions of Cudworth and Warburton are^ the fame, and perhaps they differ not fo much from thofe of Johnfon as many readers feem to imagine. At any rate, the arguments by which Warburton fupports his doftrine muft have fome force, fince it is faid that Hoadley himfelf acknowledged they would be unarifwerable, if it could be proved that the death of Chrift was a real facrifice. SUPPLEMENT, in literature, an appendage to fupply what is wanting in a book. Books of various kinds require fuch an appendage ; but none lo much as a dictionary of arts and Iciences, which, from the progreftive courfe of phyfical fcience, cannot be completed without it. SUPPORTED, in Heraldry, a term applied to the uppermoft quarters ©f a ftueld when divided into feveral quarters, thefe feeming as it were fupported or fuftained by thofe below. The chief is faid to be fupported when it is of two colours, and the upper colour takes up twothirds of it. In this cafe it is fupported by the colour underneath. SUPPORTERS, in Heraldry, figures in an achievement placed by the fide of the (hield, and feeming to fupport or hold up the fame. Supporters are chiefly figures of beads : figures of human creatures for the like purpofe are called tenants. SUPPOSITION, in Mujic, is when one of the parts dwells on a note, while another part makestivo or more leffer notes equivalent to it, by conjoint degrees. Suppofition is defined by a late author the ufing of two fucceflive notes, of the fame value as to time j the one whereof, being a difeord, fuppofes the other a concord. The harmony, Mr Malcolm obferves, is always to be full on the accented parts of the bar or meafurej but, on the unaccented, difeords may tranfiently pafs, without any offence to the ear. This tranfient ufe of difeords followed by concords^ make what we, after the French, call fuppofition. Supper II .

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Concords by fuppofition are thofe where the conti- Suppofition nued bafe adds or fuppofes a new found below the funSur. damental bafs; whence fuch concords always fucceed the , extent of the o&ave. Of thefe concords there are three forts, all which are concords of the feventh : the firft, when the added found is a third below the fundamental found; fuch is the concord of the ninth : and if the concord of the ninth is formed by the mediant, added below the fenfible concord in the minor mode, then the concord is called the fuperfluous fifth. The fecond kind when the fuppofed found is a fifth below the fundamental found, as in the concord of the fourth or eleventh j and if the concord is fenfible, and the tonic be fuppofed, this concord is called the fuperfluous feventh. The third kind is that where the fuppofed found is below a concord of the diminifhed feventh ; if it is a fifth below, i. e. if the fuppofed found be the mediant, the concord is called the concord of the fourth and fuperJluous fifth I if it is a feventh below, i. e. if the fuppofed found be the tonic, the concord is called the lejfer fixth and fuperfluous feventh. SUPPOSITORY, a kind of medicated cone or ball,... which is introduced into the anus for opening the belly. It is ufually compofed of common honey, mixed up with foap or oil, and formed into pieces of the length and thicknefs of the little finger, only pyramidal. To the compofition is fometimes alfo added powder of fcammony, euphorbium, colocynthis, fait, aloes, &c. according to the cafe of the patient. The fuppofitory was invented for the convenience of fuch as have an averfion to clyfters; or to be ufed when the difeafe does not allow their ufe. SUPPRESSION, in Medicine, is generally ufed to fignify a retention of urine or of the menfes. SUPPURATION, the fecond way wherein an inflammation terminates ; being a converfion of the infpiffated blood and the firft adjacent parts, as the veffels and fat, into pus or matter } which diforder, when it has not yet found an opening, is generally called an abfeefs. SUPRACOSTALESy in Anatomy. See fable of the Muficles in ANATOMY.

SUPRAL APSARIANS, in Theology, perfons who hold that God, without any regard to the good or evil works of men, has refolved, by an eternal Aecree, fupra lapfum, antecedently to any knowledge of the fall of Adam, and independently of it, to fave fome and to damn others •, or, in other words, that God intended to glorify his juftice in the condemnation of fome, as well as his mercy in the falvation of others} and for that purpofe decreed that Adam fhould neceflarily fall, and by that fall bring himfelf and all his offspring into a ftate of everlafting, condemnation*. Thefe are alfo called antelapfiaries, and are oppofed to fublapfaries and infralapfaries. According to the fupralapfarians* the objeft of predeftination is, homo creabilis et labilis; and, according to the fublapfarians and infralapfarians, homo crealus et' lapfiur.

SUPRASPINATUS, in Anatomy.

See Table of

the Mu files in ANATOMY.

SUPREMACY, the faperiority or fovereignty of the king. See SOVEREIGNTY. SUR, or SHUR, in Ancient Geography, a defert of Arabia Petraea, extending between Paleftine and the Arabian gulf j into which the Ifraelites, after marching through

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2 through the Red fea, firft came (Exod. xv. 22.). Again (Numb, xxxiii. 8.), it is faid, that from the fea they went three days journey into the Wildernefs of Etham j whence fome conclude that Etham and Shur are the fame wildernefs j or only differ as a part from the whole, Shur being the general name, and Etham that part of it lying neareft to the place of encampment of the fame name. We know fo little of the geography of thefe places, that there is more room for deputation than for decifion. As to the route which the Ifraelites followed in their paffage through the Red fea, Mr Bryant, we think, has given the moft fatisfa&ory account in his late work on the Plagues of Egypt.—-Shur is now called Corondel. SURAT, a city of Indoftan, belonging to Britain, on the weftern coaft of the peninfula, a little to the northward of Bombay, and about l6 miles up the river Tappee. It is but of modern date, and is a moft remarkable inftance of the power of trade to bring wealth and population to any fpot where it can be brought to fettle. Towards the middle of the 17th century, this place was only the refort of a few merchants, who, under the fhelter of an old infignificant caftle, laid the firft ■foundations of a city now almoft as large and fully as populous as London within the walls, and containing -many fine buildings of Indian archite£ture, which is partly Gentoo and partly Morifque. Thofe of the greateft note are fo contrived, that the gateway is defenlible againft any fudden irruption of a few armed men. The private apartments lie backwards for the conveniency of the women, of whom the Moors are remarkably jealous. They are fond of having one room, in the midft of which a fountain keeps playing, and which, by its noife, lulls them to fleep, and refrefhes the room by its coolnefs j but thus a damp is produced, which would be very dangerous to Europeans. They have alfo generally a faloon with fountains playing in it, which, with the variegated flower-beds, in which they are very curious, makes a beautiful profpeft. During the intenfe heats of fummer they have country retirements a little way out of town, where they refide, or go in parties to amufe themfelves. The ftreets are irregularly laid out 5 but have one property which renders it agreeable to walk in them, viz. that a competent width being left at bottom, the upper ftories of the houfes proje£t over one another in fuch a manner, that people may with eafe converfe from them ; by which means the ftreet is agreeably fhaded, at the fame time that a proper ventilation is not impeded, but rather promoted. The (hops, notwithftanding the vaft trade carried on in this great and populous city, have a very mean appearance, owing to the dealers keeping their goods in warehoufes, and felling by famples. No place is better fupplied with provifions than the city of Surat while its communication with the country remains open. Befides the unbounded importation, by which every article is brought here in great abundance, the natural produftions of the foil are excellent, though lefs cheap than in other parts of India, as at Bengal efpecially ; yet in that place, though the cattle and poultry are bought originally at a very low rate, they turn out very dear by the time they are fed for the table. Here, however, all kinds of eatables may be had at a reafonable price, ready for immediate ufe, and as good as can .be found anywhere. The wheat of Surat is fa-

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mous all over India for its Angular fubftance, wfutenefs, and tafte $ and its falads and roots are likewife of an excellent quality. There are alfo many kinds of wildfowl and other game to be had at an eafy rate j but for wines and fpirituous liquors they depend moftly on importation. Surat was furrounded with a wall in a fhort time after it had afliimed the form of a town. The fortification, however, was meant only to prevent the incurfions of the Mahrattas, who had twice pillaged it j fo that theplace was by no means capable of Handing any regular liege. Even the caftle appears but a poor defence, being mounted with cannon here and there, without any order, or without any thing like an attempt towards military architecture. In this city, before the Eaft India Company became invefted with the pofleflion of Bombay, was the prefidency of their affairs on the weftern coaft. For this purpofe they had a factory eltabliflied there with great privileges by the Mogul government j and even after the prefidency was eftablilhed at Bombay, they continued a fadtory here at one of the belt houfes in the city ; which yet not being fpacious enough to contain their effeifts, they hired another at fome diftance from it, and nearer the water-Ade, which was called the new factory. In the mean time, the city flouriflied, and became the centre of all the Indian trade, being much more frequented for the fake of foreign merchandife than for either the natural produdtions or manufaftures of the country, though they alfo made a confiderable part of its commerce. In ftiort, there was fcarce any article of merchandife but what was to be found at all times in Surat, almoft as readily as in London itfelf. While the Mogul government was in its vigour, there was fuch a ftiow of juftice kept up, as induced merchants of all religions and denominations to take up their refidence in the city. The Gentoos efpecially reforted thither, in order to avoid the oppreflions of their own government. Great care indeed was taken that no very flagrant afts of oppreflion flrould be committed j fo that, in what fometimes happened, appearances were at leaft kept up*, and the oppreflions of government were chiefly owing to the animoflties and rivalfhip of the merchants themfelves. As an inftance of the great extent to which commerce was pufhed in Surat, we ftiall here quote from Mr Grofe, what is faid by Captain Hamilton of a merchant named Abdulgafour, viz. “ That he drove a trade equal to the Eaft India Company : for he had known him fit out in a year above 20 fail of ftrips, between 300 and 800 tons, none of which had lefs of his own flock than 20,cool, and fome of them 25,000!. After that foreign flock was fent away, it behoved him to have as much more of an inland flock for the following year’s market.’’ On the deceafe of this merchant, the government feized on a million of his money ; and his grandfon was not only deprived of all that he poffeffed, but barbaroufly murdered through the envy and treachery of his brother merchants, and the rapacity of the governor. The city of Surat was taken and ruined by the Portuguefe in 1520 ; and it was not till after this misfortune that it became fuch a celebrated emporium. All the Indian merchants who had been accuftomed to trade thither contributed to re-eftablifti it ; but it was not till near a century after that it became the general ftaple of Indian

SUE t i Surat, Indian and European merchandife; when the Dutch Surcharge, appearing in the Indian ocean, had deprived the Portu^ ” gue^e their conquefts on that coaft, and almoft entirely ruined their trade. The Englilh eftablilhed a fa&ory here in 1609, the Dutch in 1616, and the French in 1665. In procefs of time, the Indian feas being greatly infefted by pirates, a naval officer was appointed by the Mogul to keep them in awe. This officer was named Siddee (a) Mu/foot, who had been chief of an Ethiopian colony fettled at Rajapore. Here he had colle6led fome veflels of corffiderable force, and carried on fome trade, till he was difpoffeffed by the Mahrattas 5 upon which he repaired to Bombay, and afterwards to Surat, where he was appointed admiral on that ftation to the Mogul, with a yearly revenue of about 36,000!. fterling. Though he had no power, independent of the marine, he feized on the caftle, encroached on the town, and appropriated to himfelf a third part of its revenues, under pretence of arrears due in his appointed revenue. Another third was paid to the Mahrattas, to prevent their depredations upon trade in the open country ; but they, not fatisfied with this flipulation, watched an opportunity to plunder the town, which wTas kept in fubjeflion by Siddee Muffoot, till his death which happened in 1756. Siddee Mulfoot was fucceeded by his fon, who foon rendered himfelf very difagreeable to the inhabitants. In 1758, the Engliffi factory was greatly oppreffed by him, and the black merchants treated ftill worfe ; on which the latter applied to Mr Ellis the Engliffi chief at that time, defiring him to recommend it to the prefidency of Bombay to take the caftle by force out of the hands of the ufurper. This propofal proving agreeable, Admiral Pococke, who was then with his fquadron at Bombay, readily concurred in fupporting the expedition. The enterprife was conduced with the ufual fuccefs attending the Britiffi arms; and Captain Maitland the conductor took pofleffion of the caftle with its revenue in name of the Eaft India Company, who were confirmed in the government by grants from the Mogul. SURCHARGE of the Forest, is when a commoner puts more beafts in the foreft than he has a right to. See Forest. SURCHARGE of Common, is a difturbance of common of pafture, by putting more cattle therein than the pafture and herbage will fuftain, or the party hath a right to do. This injury can only happen where the common is appendant or appurtenant, and of courfe limitable by law •, or where, when in grofs, it is exprefsly limited and certain j for where a man hath common in grofs, Jans nombre, or without ftint, he cannot be a furcharge. In this cafe indeed there muft be left fufficient for the lord’s own beafts. T he ufual remedies for furcharging the common are by the lord’s diftraining the furplus number, or by his bringing an aClion of trefpafs, or by a fpecial aClion on the cafe, in which any commoner may be plaintiff. The ancient and moft effeClual method of proceeding is by writ of admeafurement of pafture. Writ of Second SURCHARGE, de fecunda fuperonera-

3 3 S U R tione, is given by the ftatute of Weftm. 2. 13 Edw. I. Surcharge cap. 8. when, after the admeafurement of pafture hath sJL afcertained the right, the fame defendant furcharges the . ' ^ „‘u, t common again j and thereby the ffieriff is direCled to inquire by a jury whether the defendant has in faCt again furcharged the common *, and if he has, he (hall then forfeit to the king the fupernumerary cattle put in, and alfo ffiall pay damages to the plaintiff. SURCINGLE, a girdle wherewith the clergy of the church of England ufually tie their caffocks. See Girdle. SURCO AT, a coat of arms, to be worn over body armour. The furcoat is properly a loofe thin taffety coat, with arms embroidered or painted on it. Such as is worn by heralds, anciently alfo ufed by military men over their armour to diftinguiffi themfelves by. SURD, in Arithmetic and Algebra, denotes any number or quantity that is incommenfurable to unity: otherwife called an irrational number or quantity. See Algebra, Part. I. Chap. IV. S URETY, in Law, generally fignifies the fame with Bail. SURF, is a term ufed by feamen to exprefs a peculiar fwell and breaking of the fea upon the fliore. It fometimes forms but a fingle range along the fliore, and at others three or four behind one another extending perhaps half a mile out to fea. The furf begins to affunt© its form at fome diftance from the place where it breaks, gradually accumulating as it moves forward till it gain, not uncommonly, in places within the limits of the trade-winds, a height of 15 or 20 feet, when it overhangs at top, and falls like a cafcade with great force and a prodigious noife. Countries where furfs prevail require boats of a particular conftrudlion very different from the greater part of thofe which are built in Europe. In fome places furfs are great at high, and in others at low water j but wre believe they are uniformly moft violent during the fpring-tides. It is not eafy to affign the caufe of furfs. That they are affe&ed by the winds can hardly be queftioned *, but that they do not proceed from the immediate operation of the wind in the places where they happen, is evident from this circumftance, that the furf is often higheft and moft violent where there is leaft wdnd, and vice verfa. On the coaft of Sumatra the higheft are experienced during the fouth-eaft monfoon, which is never attended with fuch gales as the north-weft. As they are moft. general in the tropical latitudes, Mr Marfden, who feems to have paid much attention to the fubjedl, attributes them to the trade-winds which prevail at a diftanc© from ffiore between the parallels of 30 degrees north and fouth, whofe uniform and invariable aftion caufes a long and conftant fwell, that exifts even in the calmeft weather, about the line, towards which its direftion tends from either fide. This fwell, when a fquall happens or the wind freffiens up, will for the time have other fubfidiary waves on the extent of its furface, breaking often in a direftion contrary to it, and which will again fubfide as a calm returns, without having produced

(a) When the Abyffinian flaves are promoted, to any office under the Mogul government, they are.called. Siddees*.

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Surf I! . !ir eit

S U It sun r 24 ] Fafting for fome time, and an attention to temperance Siuffit ^uced on it any perceptible effeft. Sumatra, though H not continually expofed to the fouth-eaft trade-wind, is afterwards, dvith fome brilk purgatives, will generally c ■ not To diftant but that its influence may be prefumed to remove the effects of a furfeit, when it is unaccompanied ." . ^ ° with other more permanent affedtions. extend to it; and accordingly at Poolo Pefang, near the Surfeit, in Farriery. See Farriery Index. fouthern extremity of the ifland, a conftant foutherly fea SURGE, in the fea-language, the fame with a wave. is obferved, even after a ftrong north-weft wind. This inceffant and powerful fwell rolling in from an ocean, See Wave. SURGEON, or Chirurgeon, one that profeffes the open even to the pole, feems an agent adequate to the prodigious effects produced on the coaft ; whilft its very art of Surger y. In England there are two diftindt companies of furfize contributes to its being overlooked. It reconciles almoft all the difficulties which the phenomena feem to geons now occupying the faience or faculty of furgery ; prefent, and in particular it accounts for the decreafe of the one company called barbers, the other furgeons, the furf during the north-Weft monfoon, the local wind which latter are not incorporated.—The two are united then countera&ing the operation of the general one; to fue, and be fued, by the names of mailers or goverand it is corroborated by an obfervation, that the furfs nors and commonalty of the myftery of barbers and furon the Sumatran coaft ever begin to break at their geons of London. 32 Hen. VIII. c. 42. No perfon ufing any barbery or (having in London, fouthern extreme, the motion of the fwell not being perpendicular to the dire&ion of the ftiore. This explana- fliall occupy any furgery, letting of blood, or other mattion of the phenomena is certainly plaufible ; but, as the ter ; drawing of teeth only excepted. And no perfon author candidly acknowledges, objedlions may be urged ufmg the myftery or craft of furgery (hall occupy or exto it. The trade-winds and the fweli occafioried by ercife the feat or craft of barbery or (having, neither by them are remarkably fteady and uniform ; but the furfs himfelf, nor any other for his ufe. 32 Hen. VIII. are much the reverfe. How then comes an uniform c. 4-2. By the fame ftatute, furgeons are obliged to have caufe to produce unfteady effetts ? In the opinion of our author it produces no unfteady figns at their doors. The French chirurgeons being refufed to be admitted effefts. The irregularity of the furfs, he fays, is perceived only within the remoter limits of the trade-winds. into the univerlities (notwithftanding that their art But the equatorial parts of the earth performing their makes a branch of medicine), on pretence of its borderdiurnal revolution with greater velocity than the reft, a ing a little on butchery or cruelty, affociated their (elves larger circle being defcribed in the fame time, the wa- into a brotherhood, under the protedlion of S. Colmus ters thereabout, from the rtronger centrifugal force, may and S. Damian : on which account, according to the be fuppofed more buoyant; to feel lefs reftraint from laws of their m. 1 if..'.ion, they are obliged to drefs and the fluggiffi principle of matter; to have lefs gravity ; look to wounds gratis the fir ft Monday of each month. They diftinguifh between a chirurgeon of the long and therefore to be more obedient to external impulfes of every kind, whether from the winds or any other robe and a barbtr-ehiruigeon. The firft ha« ftudied plrvfic, and is allowed to wear a gown. The (kill of caufe. the other, btfides what relates to the management of SURFACE. See Superficies. SURFEIT, in Medicine, a ficknefs with a fenfation the beard, is fuppofed to be confined to the more Ample of a load at the ftomach, ufually proceeding from fome and eafy operations in chirurgery; as bleeding, tootherror in diet, either with regard to the quantity or qua- drawing, &c. They Were formerly diftinguifhed by badges: thole lity of the food taken. Sometimes, however, a furfeit is only a plethora from indolence and full diet; in which of the long gown bore a cafe of inftruments; the barber^ cafe perfpiration is defedtive j and eruptions appear on a bafon. theikin.

SURGERY. THE term furgery has been ufually employed to (ignify that part of medicine which treats of the difeafes of the human body which are to be cured or alleviated by the hand, by inftruments, or by external applications. INTRODUCTION. Medicine and furgery, formerly regarded as one and the fame fcience, were exercifed by the fame perfons during the moft remote ages; and their feparation, fuch as now generally exifts, is to be confidered as a modern inftitution. If we confider their origin and end, the knowledge which the pra&itioner of each requires, and the connexion which naturally fubfifts between the dif-

eafes which are fuppofed peculiarly to belong to each department, it is probable that the firft pra&itioners confounded them with one another; and it is eafy to conceive how the fame ideas ftiould have paffed from one generation to another. At laft, however, the knowledge of the healing art being greatly enlarged, it became neceffary to feparate it into different claffes, and to form it into diftinft departments in praftice. Accordingly there were not only fome who confined themfelves to furgery, but there were lithotoftiifts, phlebotomifts, oculifts, aurifts, dehtifts, &c. We do not propofe here to enter into any detail in attempting to (how how this feparation w’as made, and ftill lefs to make mention of the puerile difputes regarding the pre-eminfence of medicine to furgery. 1 There are

SURGERY. Infcroduc- nre few we believe who in our days do not feel that ednefs of thought, ’which is neceflary for a good opera- Introduc tion. tor; and there are fome who are even deficient in that ; tlon* a pre-eminence does not exift in nature j that 'r^ medicine and forgery are one and the fame fcience; mechanical dexterity, which, though not requifite in all, is yet neceflary in feveral of the operations in furgery. that they are coeval with the human race; and to thofe * who are able to appreciate them, they muft appear of Thefe talents, however, are never given in fuch perequal utility and importance. The healing art is one, fection as not to require cultivation. An early habit of its principles ought to be the fame throughout, and the being prefent, and of afliding at operations, prepare^ the exercifes of its different branches fuppofes the fame fun- dudent to aCt for bimfelf; and a long and unremitting damental knowledge 5 but it offers in the detail fuch a habit of ufing the knife, and (if performing operations vaft field for ftudy, that few men are able to embrace on the dead body, gives a facility in all the mechanical the whole, and to cultivate all the parts with equal fuc- part of them, which even experience on the living body cefs. It becomes, therefore, an advantage to fociety does not procure. that fuch parts as can be eafily feparated in pra&ice be exercifed by different individuals; and that a man who Hijlory of Surgery. has acquired a general knowledge of the flrufture, That furgery was coeval with the other branches of fun&ions, and difeafes of the animal economy, pra&ife in fuch departments as he finds his talents and acquire- medicine, or perhaps antecedent to any of them, will not admit of doubt. The wars and contentions which ments point out. Some have oppofed furgery to medicine by qualifying have taken place among mankind almod ever fince their the firit with the name of art, and in giving to the fe- creation, necedarily imply that there would be occafion cond that of fcience. To pretend that furgery is no- for furgeons at a very early period; and probably exthing but the art of treating difeafes by external means ternal injuries would for fome time be the only difor by manual operations, is to rank it among the me- eafes for which a cure would be attempted, or perhaps chanical profeffions; and to confider as a good furgeon, thought prafticable. In the facred writings we find the man who can drefs an ulcer, apply a bandage, reduce much mention of balfams, particularly the balm of a frafture, amputate a limb, or perform fuch like opera- Gilead, as excellent in the cure of wounds; though at tions, on the living body. We have already mentioned the fame time we are informed that there were fome that the healing art is the fame in all its branches; the wounds which this balfam could not heal. Concerning the furgery praftifed among the Egyp3 internal organs of the body in a flate of health are governed by the fame general laws, and many of them are tians, Jews, and Afiatic nations, wTe know little. The analogous in flrufture to the external parts ; and the art defeended from the Greeks to us, though they connature of a local difeafe can never be underftood if we fefledly received it from the eaftern nations. The firft are not acquainted with all the deviations from the na- Greek furgeons on record are yEfeulapius and his fons tural date, of which the whole animal fyflem is fufeep- Podalirius and Machaon. iEfculapius flourilhed about dble. If a phyfician be called to treat a pleurify, he 50 years before the Trojan war; and his tw^o fons diftincannot expert to do it with fuccefs unlefs he have a fuf- guilhed themfelves in that war both by their valour and ficiently clear idea of the nature of inflammation, or at by their Ikillin curing wounds. This indeed is the whole leall of the principal fymptoms which charadlerife it; of the medical fkill attributed to them by Homer; for of its confequences, and of the proper mode of applying in the plague which broke out in the Grecian camp, the means to remove it. This knowledge is not lefs he does not mention their being at all confulted. Nav, necefl'ary to the furgeon who is called to treat an wound, what is ftill more ftrange, though he fometimes mentions the management of which depends chiefly on the pre- his heroes having their bones broke, he never cakes nocautions neceflary to prevent and remove inflammation tice of their being reduced or cured by any other than in the affedled parts, without at the fame time weaken- fupernatural means; as in the cafe of iEneas, whofe ing too much the vital powers. The knowledge of the thigh-bone was broken by a flone caft at him by Diophyfician does not merit more the name offcience, than med. The methods which thefe two famous furgeons that of the furgeon who is well acquainted with the ufed in curing the wounds of their fellow foldiers, feems fun&ions of the animal economy, with morbid ftrufture, to have been the extracting or cutting out the darts and with the progrefs and termination of difeafes. which inflicted them, and applying emollient fomentaThe ftudent of furgery has therefore to acquire, not tions or ftyptics to them when neceflary: and to thefe only all that knowledge neceffary for the well educated they undoubtedly attributed much more virtue than phyfician, but he has likewife to learn the manner of they could poflibly poflefs ; as appears from the followperforming furgical operations. This, though no doubt ing lines, where Homer describes Eurypylus as wounded an effential requifite to the furgeon, is by no means fo and under the hands of Patroclus, who would certainly important as a competent knowledge of thofe difeafes praCtife according to the directions of the furgeons. and dates of difeafe which require fuch means; and the Patroclus cut the forky fteel away; young furgeon diould endeavour nottocherilh that love Then in his hand a bitter root he bruis’d, of operating which is obferved in fome, and which arifes The wound he wafh’d, the ftyptic juice infus’d. from the eclfit which a dexterous operator generally reThe clofngflefh that inftant ceas’d to glow; ceives. The wound to torture, and the blood to flow. To become an intelligent and expert operator, feveral qualifications are neceflary ; and fome of thefe fall to Till the days of Hippocrates we know very little of the lot of few individuals. There are many people, what was the praCtice of the Greek furgeons. From who, though they have acquired an extenfive knowledge him, however, we learn, that the praClice of blood-letof difeafes, have not that calmnefs of mind, that colled- ting, cupping, and fcarification, was known to them; al\ OL. XX. Part I.

6 S U R G Hiftory. fo the ufe of ovarm and emollient fomentations, iffufcs “""'i ' made with hot irons, peffaries, injections, fumigations, &c. Hippocrates alto gives direftiens with regard to fraCtures, luxations, ulcers, fiftulas. He dirteCts the extenfion, reduction, bandages, and fplints, proper to ,e ufed in fraftares and luxations of ditferent bones, with feveral machines to increafe the extenfion when neceifary. He dittos the laxity and tightnels of the bandages ; the intervals for unloofing and binding them on again ; the pofitioh and repofe of the fraCtured member, and the proper regimen } and he mentions the time when a callus is ufually farmed. He treats alfo of fractures of the fkull, and the method of applying the trepan. In his treatment of ulcers, he (peaks of reducing fungous flefh by means of efcharotics, fome of which are alum, nitre, verdigrife, quicklime, &c. 4 Surgery appears not to have exifted in Rome, notwith(landing the warlike genius of the people, for more than ijoo years. Archagathus, a Greek, was the full profeffor of the art in that city *, and fo frequently employed the knife, hot irons, and other cruel methods of cure, that he was branded with the opprobrious title of earnifex, and expelled the city, where no phyfician Or furgeon of eminence again made his appearance for 180 years. At this time Afclepiades undertook the ptofeffion of medicine j but feems to have dealt little in forgery. Neither have we any thing of importance on That fubieCl till the time of Celfus, who flomilhed durincr the reigns of Auguttus and Tiberius.—In his work on furgery, all the improvements from Hippocrates to his own days are collected \ the moll minute and trifling difeafes are not omitted. An eminent furgeon, of the moderns, emphatically exhorts every per (on in that profeffion “ to keep Celfus in his hands by day and by night.” He defcribes the figns of a fraClured fkull, the method of examining for the fraClure, of laying the Ikull bare by an incifion in the form of the letter X, and afterwards of cutting away the angles, and of applying the trepan, mentioning alfo the figns of danger and of recovery. He obferved, that fometimes, though very rarely, a fatal concuflion of the brain might happen from the blood-veffels within the fkull being burft, the bone remaining entire. After the operation of the trepan, fpunges and cloths wetted with vinegar, and f'everal other applications, were made to the head j and, throughout, fevere abflinence was enjoined. In violent fracfures of the ribs, he ordered veneledion ; low diet *, to guard againfl all agitation of the mind, loud fpeaking, motion, and every thing that might excite coughing or fneezing. Cloths wetted with Wine, roles and oil', and other applications, were laid over the frafture. The cure of fractures, in the upper and lower extremities, he faid were nearly alike *, that fraTures differ in degree of violence and danger, in being fimple or compound, that is, with or without a wound of the flefti, and in being near to the joint. He directs the extenfion of the member by aflillants •, the reduction, by the furgeon’s hands, of the fractured bones into their natural fituation •, and to bind the fra£tured part with bandages of different lengths, previoufly dipped in wine and oil: on the third day freflr bandages are to be applied, and the fractured member fomented with warm vapour, efpecially during the inflammation. Splints, if neceffary, are to be applied, to retain the bones in a fixed pofition. The fractured arm is to be fufpended in a broad

E R Y. fling hung round the neck: the fractured leg is to be inclofed in a kind of cafe, reaching above the ham, and 1~— accommodated likewife with a fupport to the foot, and with ftraps at the fide, to keep the leg ileady : in the fra&ured thigh-bone, the cafe is to extend from the top of the hip to the foot. He defcribes the method of treating compound fradtures, and of removing fmall fragments of fplinters of bones ; and the manner of extradting darts. In luxations of the flioulder, he mentions feveral methods of giving force to the extenfion, and of replacing the dillocated bone. One method fimilar to that of Hippocrates was, to fufpend the patient by the arm j the fore part of the flioulder, at the fame time, refting upon the top of a door, or any other fuch firm fulcrum. Another method was to lay the patient fupine, fome afliflants retaining the body in a fixed pofition, and others extending the arm in the contrary diredtion j the furgeon, in the mean time, attempting, by his hands, forcibly to reduce the bone into its former place. If a large inflammation Ivas expedled to enfue after a wound, it Was fuffered to bleed for fome time, and blood was drawn from the arm. To wounds accompanied w ith confiderable haemorrhagy, he applied a fponge wet in vinegar, and conllant preffure : Ir neceffary, on account of the violence of the haembrrhagy, ligatures were made round the veffels, and fometimes the bleeding orifice Was feared up with the point of a hot iron. On the third day frefli dreflings were applied. In confiderable contufions, with a {mall wound of the flefti, if neither blood-veffels nor nerves prevented, t he wound was to be enlarged. Abftinence and low diet, upon all fuch accidents, Were preferibed •, cloths Wet with vinegar, and feveral other applications, were to be applied to the inflamed part. He obferves, that frefli wounds may be healed without compound applications. In external gangrene, he cut into the found flefti ; and when the difeafe, in fpite of every effort, fpread, he advifed amputation of the member. After cutting to the bone, the flefli was then foparated from it, and drawn back, in order to fave as much fl'efti as poflible to cover the extremity of the bone. Celfus, though extremely diffufe in the defeription of furgical difeafes, and of various remedies and external applications, treats flightly of the method of amputating 5 from which, comparing his treatife with the modem fyftems, We might infer that the operation Was then feldomer praftifed th n at prefent. He defcribes the fymptoms of that dangerous inflammation the carbuncle, and directs, immediately to burn or corrode the gangrened part. To promote the fuppuration of abfeeffes, he orders poultices of barley-meal, or of marflimallows, or the feeds of linfeed and fenugreek. He alfo mentions the compofitions of feveral repellent cataplafms. In the erysipelas, he applies cerufe, mixed with the juice of folanum or nightihade. Sal ammoniac was fometimes mixed with his plafters. He is very minute in deferibing difeafes of the eyes, ears, and teeth, and in preferibing a multitude of remedies and applications. In inflammation of the eyes, he enjoined abftinence and low diet, reft, and a dark room : if the inflammation was violent, with great pain, he ordered venefeftion, and a purgative 5 a fmall poultice of fine flower, faffron, and the white of an egg, to be laid to the forehead to fupprefs the flow of pituita ?

S U ft G E Tt Y. VI Kiftory. tKe foft infide of warm wheat bread dipped in wine, to there are a few ufeful remedies now laid afide and ne- Hiftary. v '-—v"”—' be laid to the eye ; poppy and rofes were alfo added to glected. The laft writer of confequence who flourilhed at Rome his collyriums, and various ingredients too tedious to enumerate. In chronic watery defluxions of the eyes, was Galen, phyfician to the emperor Marcus Aurelius. he applied aftringents, cupped the temples, and burnt His works are for the moft part purely medical; althe veins over the temple and forehead. He couched though he wrote alfo on furgery, and made Commencatara&s by deprefling the cryftalline lens to the bot- taries on the Surgery of Hippocrates'. He opened the tom of the orbit. Teeth, loofened by any accident, he jugular veins and performed arteriotomy at the temples; directs, after the example of Hippocrates, to be faflened direfted leeches, fcarification, and cupping-gtafles, to with a gold thread to thofe adjoining on each fide. draw blood. He alio deferibed with accuracy the difPrevious to drawing a tooth, he ordered the gum to be ferent fpecies of hernise or ruptures. In the year 500 flouriffied Aeiius, in whofe works we cut round its neck; and if the tooth was hollow, it was to be filled with lead before extra&ion, to prevent its meet with many obfervations omitted by Celfus and Gabreaking by the forceps. He deferibes not only the in- len, particularly on the furgieal operations, the difeafes flammation, but likewife the elongation, of the uvula: of women, the caufes of difficult labours, and modes of he alfo deferibes the polypus, and fome other difeafes delivery. He alfo takes notice of the dracunculus, or Guinea worm. Aetius, however, is greatly excelled by affecting the nofe. He deferibes feveral fpecies of hernise or rupture, and Paulus Egineta, who flouriffied in 640; whofe treatii'e the manual afliflance required in thofe complaints. on furgery is fuperior to that of all the other ancients. After the return of the inteitines into the abdomen, a He direCls how to extraCt darts ; to perform the operafirm comprefs was applied to that part of the groin tion fometimes required in dangerous cafes of rupture or through which they protruded, and was fecured by a hernia. He treats alfo of aneurifm. Galen, Paulus, bandage round the loins. In fome cafes, after the re- and all the ancients, fpeak only of one fpecies of aneuturn of inteflinal ruptures, he diminithed the quantity of rifm, and define it to he “ a tumor arifing from arterial loofe Ikin, and formed a cicatrix, fo as to contract over blood extravafated from a ruptured artery.” The anthe part, to render it more rigid and capable of refill- eurifm from a dilatation of the artery is a difeovery of ing. He deferibes various difeafes of the genital parts, the moderns. In violent inflammations of the throat, the hydrocele or dropfy of the ferotum, a difficulty of where immediate danger of fuffocation was threatened, urine, and the manner of drawing off the water by a Paulus performed the operation of bronchotomy. In catheter *, the figns of done in the bladder, and the me- obftinate defluxions upon the eyes, he opened the juthod of founding or feeling for that Hone. Lithotomy gular veins. He deferibes the manner of opening the was at that time perfermed by introducing two fingers arteries behind the ears in chronic pains of the head. into the anus ; the ftone was then preffed forward to the He wrote alfo upon midwifery. 1'abricius ab Aquapenperinseum, and a cut made into the bladder", and by the dente, a celebrated furgeon of the 16th century, has finger or by a fcoop the ftone was extradled. He de- followed Celfus and Paulus as text books. From the time of Paulus Egineta to the year pcc, feribes the manner of performing this operation on both the fexes, of treating the patient, and the figns of re- no writer of any confequence, either on medicine or furgery, appeared. At this time the Arabian phyficians covery and of danger. Celfus direfled various corrofive applications and in- Rhazes and Avicenna revived in the eaft the medical jections to fiftulas •, and, in the laft extremity, opened art, which, as well as others, was almoft entirely extinthem to the bottom with a knife, cutting upon a groov- guifhed in the weft. Avicenna’s Canon Medicines, or ed inftrument or conduClor. In old callous ulcers, he General Syftem of Medicine and Surgery, was for many made a new wound, by either cutting away the hard ages celebrated through all the fchools of phylic. It edges, or corroding them with verdigrife, quicklime, was principally compiled from the writings of Galen alum, nitre, and with fome vegetable efcharotics. He and Rhazes. The latter had correClly deferibed the mentions the fymptoms of caries in the bone; direfts fpina ventofa, accompanied with an enlargement of the the bone to be laid bare, and to be pierced with feveral bone, caries, and acute pain. In difficult labours, he holes, or to be burnt or rafped, in order to promote an recommends the fillet to affift in the extraction of the exfoliation of the corrupted part; afterw-ards to apply foetus; and for the fame purpofe, Avicenna recommends nitre and feveral other ingredients. One of his applica- the forceps. He deferibes the compofition of feveral tions to a cancer was auripigmentum or arfenie. He cofmetics to polifli the fkin, and make the hair grow-, or direCls the manner of tapping the abdomen in afeites, fall off. and of drawing blood by the lancet and cupping-glafles. Notwithftanding this, however, it was not till the His cupping-glaffes feem not to have been fo convenient time of Albucafis that furgery came into repute among as the modern : they were made either of brafs or horn, the Arabians, Rhazes complains of their grofs ignoand were t nprovided with a pump. He cured varicofe rance, and that the manual operations were performed veins by uftion or by incifion. He gives directions for by the phyficians fervants. Albucafis enumerates a extracting the dead foetus from the womb, in whatever tremendous lift of operations, fufficient to fill us with pofition it Ihould prefent; and, after delivery, to apply horror. Tire hot iron and cauteries w'ere favourite reto the private parts foft cloths wet in an infufion of vi- medies of the Arabians; and, in inveterate pains, they negar and rofes. In Celfus’s works there is a great repofed, like the Egyptians and eaftern Afiatics, great redundance and fuperfluity of plafters, ointments, ef- confidence in burning the part. He deferibes accuratecharotics, eollyriums, of fiippurating and difeutient ca- ly the manner of tapping in afeites; mentions feveral taplafms, and external applications of every kind, both kinds of inftruments for drawing blood ; and has left a fimple and compound: Perhaps, amongft the multitude, more ample and correCl delineation of furgical inftruD 2 ments

SURGERY. merits than any of the ancients. He gives various ob- rofe from the aftiftance of governments in the different Hiftory, itetrical directions for extradling the foetus in cafes of countries. They being convinced that anatomy is one of ^ difficult labour. He mentions the bronchocele, or pro- the moft neceffary feiences, and the groundwork of the minent tumor on the neck, which, he tells us, was moft whole healing art, but particularly of furgery, in many frequent among the female fex. We are alio informed great cities academies were iivftituted for the cultivaby this writer, that the delicacy of the Arabian women tion of praftical anatomy j and fchools were alfo eftadid not permit male furgeons to perform lithotomy on blilfied for the inftruclion of the theoretical and practifemales ; but, when necelfary, it was executed by one of cal parts of furgery. Thefe improvements in furgery have been chiefly their own fex. From the nth century to the middle of the 14th, made in England, France, and Germany •, and in all the hiftory of furgery affords nothing remarkable ex- thefe countries a number of very eminent men have apcept the importation of that naufeous difeafe the leprofy peared. The Englilfi furgeons, befides poffefling an accurate into Europe. Towards the end of the 15th century the venereal difeafe is faid to have been imported from knowledge of anatomy, and great abilities in the operative part of their profeffion, were the firft who endeaAmerica by the firft difcoverers of that continent. A.t the beginning of the 16th century, furgery was voured to bring the art to its prefent fimplicity. They held in contempt in this ifland, and was praftifed indif- directed alfo their attention, in a particular manner, to eriminately by barbers, farriers, and fow-gelders. Bar- the diet of patients ; the negledl of which had caufed bers and furgeons continued, for 200 years after, to the unfortunate iffue of many operations which had been be incorporated in one company both in London and dexteroufly performed. Among the furgeons of later times, we may firft menParis. In Holland and fome parts of Germany, even at this day, barbers exercife the razor and lancet alter- tion the name of Sharp. He was a fcholar of Cheffelden, and one of the beft furgeons of his day. He wrote a nately. It is within the laft three centuries that we have any Compendium of Surgical Operations, 1746*, and alfo a confiderable improvement in furgery } nor do we know Critical Inquiry into the State of Surgery ; both of of any eminent Britifh furgical u'riters until within the which works are ftill in high eftimation. In the year 1719, Dr Monro, after vifiting the laft 130 years. “ In Germany (fays Heifter) all the different furgical operations, at the beginning even of fchools of London, Paris, and Leyden, where he was a the 18th century, were left to empirics ; while regular pupil of the great Boerhaave, came to Edinburgh *, and practitioners were contented to cure a wound, open a this may be confidered as the date of the foundation of vein or an abfcefs, return a fractured or luxated bone 5 the Edinburgh medical fchool. He began by giving but they feldom.or never ventured to perform any of the leftures on anatomy and furgery, the firft which were dedifficult operations.” He alfo fpeaks of their grofs ig- livered in Edinburgh j and in the year 1721 he was appointed profeffor of anatomy and furgery to the univer6 norance of the Latin language. Sixteenth The firft furgical work of the 16th century worthy fity. This eminent anatomift and furgeon, befides fillceatuj y. of notice is that of J. Carpus. F. ab Aquapendente, an ing his chair with the greateft reputation, contributed to Italian, publiffied a Syftera of Surgery, containing a de- the advancement of our knowledge in many important feription of the various difeafes, accidents, and opera- parts of anatomy and furgery. His works, publiflied by tions. Boerhaave pays this author the following com- his fun, befides his Treatife on Ofteolngy, which is cerpliment : I/fe fuperavit omnes, et nemo ilti hanc difputat tainly the beft defeription of the bones that has ever been gloriam ; omnibus potius quern hocce carere po/Jhmus. given, will be found to contain many interefting and About the fame period, A. Parey, a Frenchman, made valuable obfervations on various furgical difeafes. Jofeph Warner, furgeon of Guy’s Hofpital, in Lonfeveral important additions to furgery, particularly in his colle&ion of cafes of wounds, fraftures, and other don, publilhed his Cafes and Remarks in Surgery, in a work which contains many very imaccidents which occur during war. The ancients, who the year were ignorant of powder and fire-arms, are defedlive in portant praflical remarks. He afterwards publiffied a this part of military furgery. Parey pretends to have very good work, containing a defeription of the human firft invented the method of tying with a needle and eye and its adjacent parts, in which he particularly reftrong filk-thread waxed the extremities of large ar- je ancj

?en

^leeches employed. Some ufe fomentations, . vvhilft others apply ardent fpirits, vinegar, cold water, and aftringents. Local bleeding and emollients do not feem to give the fame relief in this as in other fpeeies of inflammation. When, however, the inflammatory fymptoms and pain are violent, it is always neceflary to take away feme blood ; and this may be belt done at the bend of the arm. '1 he affected part fhould be afterwards immerfed in ftrong brandy, fpirit of wine, or alcohol or ftrong vinegar. We have alfo feen the inflammation much abated by immerfing the hand, on its firfl: commencement, in a very large veffel of cold water. It is only, however, in the firfl: ftages of this affection that remedies of this kind can prove ufeful: for, when effufion has actually taken place, and fuppuration begun, thatftateof the difeafe is produced which thefe remedies were intended to prevent. Emollient remedies fliould now be employed ; and whenever the prefence of a fluid can be afcertained, it fliould be difcharged with a lancet. The wound is afterwards to be treated as a common abfcefs j but we may remark, that here, more than in any other part of the body, it is of the greateft importance to lay open freely every finus, which a patient ufe ®f the probe can detetff. Sinufes, fituated here, never heal; and, when allowed to fpread, are always attended with mifchief. They deflroy ligaments and tendons, or at leaf! produce a thickening of the parts around the joints, fo as afterwards to interrupt their free motion. Sect. IV. Of the Carbuncle.

3

The carbuncle {anthrax) may be confidered as a fpecies of phlegmon, attended with a remarkable degree of malignity, and is one of the fymptoms of the plague, where that difeafe rages, or of typhus fever in this country. It confifts in a deep-feated very hard fvvelling, attended with an intenfely painful fenfe of burning in the part, and confiderable difeolouration of the Ikin. The carbuncle is often fudden in its appearance. It is of a dulky red colour at its centre, but much paler and variegated at its circumference. Vefications appear on its furface, and when thefe are ruptured they difcharge a dark-coloured fanies. The difeafe fometimes commences with fymptoms of general inflammation } but moft commonly it is attended with rigors, ficknefs, great reftleffnefs and depreffion of ftrength, fainting, delirium, &c. A miliary eruption, or even petechia, are alfo fometimes found difperfed in different parts of the body. When fuppuration takes place, feveral openings generally form in the {kin, a thin ichorous fluid is difcharged, and a dark yellow flough is obferved at the bottom of the fore. The carbuncle moft frequently takes place about the back, neck, and (boulders, and is generally folitary. They are ufually two or three inches in diameter, though fometimes they acquire an enormous fize. The cellular membrane and Ikin feem to be the principal textures affefted in this difeafe ; a great part of the former is always deftroyed by the formation and reparation of very large floughs, and that of the latter by the extenfive ulceration.

chap. I. In the treatment of this difeafe great attention is ne-GfEucyft*4 ceffary, not only to the local applications, but alfo pj Tumors, the general remedies. Emollient poultices, and warm anodyne fomentations, ought to be employed during the firft ftages of the difeaft , and 'when ulceration of the (kin has taken place, the application of an ointment, compofed of a connderable quantity of the powder of opium, we have found to relieve very much the pain which the ulcerative procefs generally creates. The ufe of rags, wet with diluted nitrous acid, or a folution of lunar cauftic, has been found of great ufe in promoting the feparation of the. llough, and the granulation of the cavities which remain. When the conftitutional fymptoms are inflammatoryin their commencement, it may be neceffary to employ general blood -letting ; but the fever being commonly of a typhoid form, wine, bark, and opium, ought to be freely adminiftered. It will be alfo proper to prefcribe a generous diet, and to pay great attention to keep the bowels regular. SECT. V. Of Kncyfed Tumors. word tumor has been the origin of much confu- Gene rid 64. j fion in the arrangements of difeafes adopted by the moft Nations, celebrated nofologlfts; they have employed it as a term°n tumo^i to charafterife a clafs, and alfo as expreffing merely a fjtnptom of difeafes. A vaft variety of difeafes have been thus included under the clafs of tumors, difeafes which are totally diffimilar, and have no analogy whatever. Anafarca, bubo, encyfted tumors, fcrofulous and fcirrhous tumors, warts, &c. have all been included under this clafs, thefe bfbng as different from one another as any difeafe with which we are acquainted, having only one common fymptom, which is that of fwelling. Mr Abernethy has lately made a very laudable attempt to arrange tumors from their anatomical ftructure but, like thofe who preceded him, he has claffed difeafes together, among which no analogy can be difcovered. He divides tumors into farcomatous, encyfted, and offeous. Under the farcoma he includes the fteatom (adipofe farcoma), medullary farcoma, and others, all of which have no refemblance to each other an their hiftorV or fymptoms. The word twnor ought therefore to be expunged from liofology, and be no longer employed to charafterife a clafs of difeafes. Its ufe fliould be fynonymous wit b. that of fwelling, and be confined to exprefs merely an enlargement of any organ of the body, or a "new growth ; whilft all thole difeafes, which have been formerly claffed among tumors, ll ould be arranged either according to their fpecific nature, or to the texture of the body in which they arife. Thus tumors, connected with lues venerea or fcrofula, fhould be included under thefe general names. The Jleatom, being a growth of fat, and being always formed in the cellular membrane, ought to be treated of among the difeafes of that texture. Encyfted tumors, being alfo formed in the cellular membrane, ought to be arranged among its difeafes j and warts, corns, and other tumors being difeafes of the (kin, will be with propriety claffed a monothem : and the fame may be faid of all other difeafes ^flich havs ufually received the general appellation of , tumor"

39 sun G E II Y. Chap. I. lour ; but when they become very large, the veins of Of Encyfted □fSnryfted tumor. We fliall, therefore, in this feaion, treat of the fkin are large, and become varicofe ; and the fkin , , Tumors. th.c>fe tumors only which nrc formed in the cellular on their upper part becomes poliftied, and acquires a ' membrane. Under the clafs of encyfted tumors {tumeurs enkyf- reddifh colour, fimilar to that of a part inflamed. I hey feldom give pain or uneafinefs, except when they reties, loups cijstides), are comprehended all thofe. tumors ceive a blow. Inflammation and pain then eafily come of preternatural formation, the contents ot which a.e on, and the cyft becomes ruptured, if it is not previoufly furrounded by a bag*or cyft. 4, Of Encyfted Encyited tumors are generally formed in the cellular opened by an inftrument. Such is the ufual progrefs of encyfted tumors; and tumors. membrane, immediately, underneath the common integuments, they are moveable, circumfcribed, commonly although they do not come to a rapid termination, yet indolent, without heat or any change of colour in the this fometimes happens more readily under certain cirfkin •, and they are very flow in their formation and cumftances, and even before they have acquired a large progrefs. They contain a matter more or lefs thick in fize. In the hip, for example, we perceive the integuconfiftence 5 and, according to the nature and confift- ments become tender and very thin, and open before ence of this matter, they are diftinguiftied by different the tumor has acquired any confiderable fize. But on names. They have been denominated atheroma, from other parts of the body, and particularly the back, the contents being of a foft cheefy confiftence; me- fhoulders, and thighs, the integuments preferve their liceris, when they contain a matter of the confiftence natural appearance, even when the tumor has acquired of honey 5 and Jleatoma, when formed of fat. The a large bulk. This appears to arife from the fkin being fleatom, however, ought not to be clafled among the more loofe in thefe parts. The fituation of ency fted tumors alfo contributes much encyfted tumors, as the thin cellular covering in which to determine the degree of adhelion which they have it is contained has no analogy in its ftructure to the contracted with the neighbouring parts. In fome fituacyst of the other tumors. It ought to be obferved, that the confiftence of the tions they are fo detached, efpecially while they conti- ■ matter contained within the eyft varies in every fpecies nue fmall, that they readily alter their fituation by very of encyfted tumor. In the atheroma and melicens they flight degrees of preffure ; but in others, particularly are more have fometirnes the confiftence and firmnefs of new when covered by any mufcular fibre, they r cheefe, and at other times they are fofter than the moft firmly fixed from their commencement. l he attachliquid honey. Thefe varieties depend on the length of ment of encyfted tumors is alfo influenced by their retime which the fluids have remained in the cyfts, and maining more or lefs free from inflammation ; for they in the proportion of coaguhble lymph and ferum, which never become inflamed, even in the flighteft manner, have been feparated and abforbed, and alfo from their without fome degree of adhefion being produced be16 having been inflamed or not, and on the extent to which tween the cyfts and contiguous parts. It has been generally luppofed that the membrane Mode of this inflammation may have proceeded. Sometimes an thei for encyfted tumor is compofed of different cyfts, each of which forms the cyft of this fpecies of tumor is not a r “ new formation in this part, but that it is formed by a ‘ which contains a fubftance of a different nature. Thefe different circumftances render in general the diagnofis in collection of fluid in one of the cells of the cellular the varieties of encyfted tumors very difficult 5 and membrane, which by its increafe dilates the cell, and happily this diftin£tion is not neceffary in pra&iee, and brings it in clofe contaCt with the adjacent cells, fo as perhaps ought alfo to be omitted in our nofological ar- finally to obliterate them, and increafe the thicknefs of rangements. The fac of an encyfted tumor is gene- its own coats. The ingenious Bichat * has ftiown that this opinion fo * Vide rally pretty firm, and compofed of concentric lamellae. We have obferved fome of the cyfts which were nearly generally adopted is without foundation, and that the Anatomic as. firm as cartilage, having fmall chalky concretions formation of encyfted tumors more probably depends on formed in many parts between each layer. When the laws, analogous to thofe which regulate the growth of contents of the tumor are wafhed out, the internal fur- the different parts of our bodies. He has alfo ftiown face of the fac generally appears fmooth and polifhed j that there is a great analogy between thefe cyfts and the but, in others, fome of the matter adheres firmly to the ferous membranes. The cyfts, like ferous membranes, form a fpecies ox furface of the fac. In fome cafes the tumor very much refembles the hydatids found in the liver and other or- fac without an openings they contain the fluid which gans ; for, befides the firm fae, there is fometimes form- they exhale, and they have a fmooth and poliftied fured within it, and apparently having no adhefion with face contiguous to the fluid, whilft the other furface is it,- a thin and very eafily torn whitifh bag^ which con- unequal, and conneded with the adjacent cellular membrane. tains the fluid. The cyfts have a fimilar ftruCture to ferous memEncyfted tumors are very fmall at their commencement, and grow by almoft infenfible degrees. They branes ; maceration, &c. proving them both to be comvary a good deal in their form and fize. Thofe which pofed of a cellular texture. In the natural ftate neithor are formed in the hip, are generally round and fmooth j of them have any fenfibility, but when inflamed they • commonly of the fize of a nut, and acquire rarely the both-become extremely fenfible. The cyfts alfo are bulk of a large egg. Thofe which are feated in other evidently fecretory organs, exhaling the fluid with parts of the body are more irregularly formed, and which they are filled, and their power of abforption is fometimes become of a prodigious fize, fome having alfo very manifeft fronrthe fpontaneous cures of fome been found which weighed to, 15, and even 20 lbs. eneyfled dropfies. Thefe confiderations led Bicliftt to conclude that They are never painful, at leaft at their commencement, and the fkin preferves, for a long time, its natural cq- there exifts a perfect refemblance between the cyfts ofthe :

SURGERY. Chap. I. 4® laws. It is a great deal in the economy of our organs Of iincyftel Of Encyfted the encyfted tumors and the ferous membranes. An lumors. important queftion here prefents itielf, to know how to point out analogies, and to ftiow the uniformity of a humors, v thefe cylls are formed, how a membrane which did not phenomenon not underftood with one in regard to' » ^ exift in the natural date can be produced, can grow, which all the world agxee. Much would be done for and even acquire a conliderable developement under the benefit of fcience, if in all its branches we could decertain circumtlances ? The mechanical explanation of monftrate that principle on which depends fuch a great thefe phenomena which has been already mentioned, number of effects, that nature, avaricious in her means, though it at firif fight may appear fimple and fatisfac- is prodigal in her refults j that a few caufes prefide over tory, yet it is by no means conformable to the ulual a multitude of effeds, and that the greater number of .proceedings of nature. How does it happen that as the thofe regarding which we are uncertain, depend on the cyfts and ferous membranes are analogous, that thefe fame principles as many others which appear to us evimembranes are formed in a different manner, the ferous dent. membranes being never formed from a compreffion of Of the treatment of EncyJIed Tumors.—.Encyfted the cellular membrane ? How is it, if the cells are ap- tumors, though not dangerous, are often inconvenient plied and compacted with one another fo as to form a from their fize, fituation, and from the deformity which lac, that the neighbouring cellular membrane does not they produce, fo that whenever their removal becomes difappear, or even diminilh, whilft the fac acquires a neceflary, this can be done alone by a furgical operalarge bulk ? Thefe refie&ions would lead us to believe tion. with Bichat, that the common manner of explaining the If the tumor be of the thin or meliceris kind, which j* formation of cyfts is eflentially different from the man- for the moft part will be the cafe when a diftinft flue-ton. ner in which nature generally follows in all her opera- tuation is perceived in it, it ought to be treated as a tions. common abfeefs. If the tumor be fmall, the matter Bichat ingenioufly remarks that all tumors which may be difeharged by laying open the moft dependent vegetate externally, or appear internally, are formed part of it with a common lancet, and treating it in the and grow in the fame manner as the cyfts, there being ordinary way till the fides of the cavity come in contaft no difference between thefe two morbid produ&ions but by adhefion, or by the procefs of granulation. But in the form in which each of them appears. Moft tu- when the tumor is more confiderable, the free admiffion mors throw out upon their external furface the fluid of air into the interior of its cavity is always dangerous j which they feparate. The cyft, on the contrary, ex- and we ought to be attentive to prevent its eftedls byhales that fluid from its internal furface, and preferves making the opening in fuch a manner, that the wound it in its cavity. “ Suppofe a fungous tumor in fuppura- be expofed as little as poflible. When treating of abtion (fays Bichat), transformed in a moment into a feeffes, we have recommended the palling of a feton or cavity, and the fuppuration to be tranfported from the cord through them, as the beft method of opening them external furface to the fides of the cavity, that cavity when they are of a large fize. This method is alio verywill then become a cyft.—Reciprocally, fuppofe a fu- convenient in the cafe of encyfted tumors, which conperficial cyft, the cavity of which is obliterated, and of tain a matter of a liquid confiftence. It will only be which the fluid is exhaled from its external furface, you neceffary here to oblerve, that the feton ftiould tranverfe will then have a tumor in fuppuration. the whole tumor, from the fuperior part of it to the “ If therefore the form alone eftablifties the difference moft dependent point, and that the inferior opening between tumors and eyfts, how does it happen that the Ihould be fufficiently large for allowing the matter to be formation of the latter is not analogous to that of the freely difeharged. 1 his method often anfwers extremefirft ? or has ever any one attempted to attribute the ly well j and cures have been performed by it which formation of external or internal tumors to compreffion? could not have been obtained in fo ffiort a time in folWe ought therefore to conceive the produftion of cyfts lowing the ordinary method of treatment by incifion. in the following manner: they begin to be formed in But this method cannot be employed, except in thofe the cellular membrane by laws analogous to thofe which cafes in which ine contents of the tumor are fo liquid as regulate the general growth of our bodies, and which to be eafily difeharged by a fmall opening. When it is appear to be deviations of thefe fundamental laws of too firm a confiftence to admit of the feton, the conof which we are ignorant. When the cyft is once tents muft be emptied, either by making an extenfive formed, exhalation begins to take place, and though opening into the cyft, or the cyft and its contents mayat firft in a fmall degree, it at laft augments in pro- be difle that the patient can walk with difficulty. Corns are generally more painful in warm than in cold weather. The pain feems to arife from an inflamed Hate of the parts in the circumference of the corn, which ftate is excited and kept up by the preffure of the induration, and not from any fenfibility in the corn itfelf. They are more painful in dry than in moift weather, becaufe they become much more hard and dry. 51 Treatment of Corns.—The pain and difficulty of walking produced by corns, may be alleviated by immerfing them in warm water, and with a ffiarp inftrument cutting off their external layers j much relief will alfo be found by covering the part with a piece of adhefive plafter, and by being careful not to wear Ihoes which are too tight. But what we have found a mofl complete cure for corns, is the application of one or other of thofe corrofive fubftances which were mentioned for the treatment of warts. The lunar cauftic, or the faturated folution of muriate of mercury in fpirit of wine, ought to be preferred. They may be applied once every fecond or third day, until the abforption of the corn be completed •, and, before ufing them, it will be found pro' per to pare off feme of the external hard layers of the corn. Some corn-operators extirpate the corn by a ffiarp inftrument j but this only proves a palliative treatment, for fooner or later a hard fubftance is again depoffted. 52 Sect. VII. Of Ncevi Muterni. Nsevi materni are thofe marks which frequently appear upon the bodies of children at birth, and which are fuppofed to originate from impreffions made on the mind of the mother during pregnancy. They are of various forms 5 their colour is likewife various, though moft frequently refembling that of claret or port-wine. Many of thefe marks are perfedlly flat, and never rife above the level of the fkin : thefe do not require the afliftance of furgery •, but in fome cafes they appear in the form of fmall protuberances, which frequently increafe to a great ftze in the courfe' of a few months. . They appear to be foft and fleffiy •, of a cellular texture, the cells containing liquid blood. They may be removed with little danger when not involving any important organ. They are fupplied indeed more plentifully with blood than moft other tumors are *, and even fometimes they appear to be entirely formed of a congeries of fmall blood-veffels •, but the arteries which fupply them may be, for the moft part, eafily fecured by ligature. An operation fhould never be long delayed j for as the fize of the veffels correfponds with that of the tumor, they fometimes are fo large as to throw out a good deal of blood before they can be fecured. In performing it, the tumor is to be cut out, the arteries taken up, and the remaining {kin brought as well together as • the nature of the part will allow, and kept fo by adhefive plafter or future. If the whole tumor be removed, little hamnorrhagy generally follows j but if the fmalleft portion of the difeafed veffels remain, not only a troublefome bleeding follows, but the tumor is quickly reproduced by an increafed exuberance. Tumors of this kind have been alfo removed by ulceration excited by the application of corroftve fubftances*, and a knowledge of this circumiiance might be in fome cafes of practical application.

E R Y. Chap. III. On the Difeafes of Mucous Membranes.

Chap. HI, Difeafes of the Mucous Membranes.

General Remarks on the Pathology of the Mucous Membranes.

53

Though at firft fight it may appear that the mucous membranes are very confiderable in number, yet when they are viewed more generally, they appear much mere limited ; and we will find that in whatever part of the body they be found, they are iubjedt to the fame morbid alterations of ftrmffure. The ingenious Bichat has ftiown that there are tw*» general mucous furfaces, of which the others are all portions. The one penetrates into the interior of the mouth, the nofe, and the anterior furface of the eye. After lining thefe two firft cavities, it is prolonged into the excretory dufts of the parotids, and fubmaxillary glands. It paffes into all the finufes, forms the conjunctiva, enters the lachrymal points, the nafal canal, the lachrymal fae, and is continued into the nofe. It lines the pharynx and euftachian tube, the trachea and bronchiae. It goes down the cefophagus into the ftomach, and paffes along the whole inteftinal canal till it joins with the {kin at the. extremity of the re£tum. This he .calls the g afro-pulmonary mucous furface. The other general mucous furface, the genito-urinary, begins in the male at the urethra ; paffes along that canal into the bladder, lines the bladder, veficulae feminales, and vafa deferentia, along with their numerous branches. It alfo extends into the excretories of the ■proftate gland, the ureters, and the pelvis of the kidneys. In the female it begins at the vulva, penetrates the ureter, and paffes as in the male over the urinary organs. * It alfo enters the vagina, lines the womb and fallopian tubes, and is then continued with the peritoneum. This is the only example of a communication eftablilhed between the mucous and ferous furfaces. This view of the extenfion of the mucous membranes is ftrongly exemplified by an examination of their difeafes j for it will appear that there is not only an analogy between the different portions of the firft, by an affe&ion of the whole parts over which it extends, but there is alfo a line of demarkation between the two, from the one remaining found whilft the other is affe£Ied throughout. This laft circumftance is confirmed in the hiftory of many epidemic catarrhs ; one of thefe membranes having been obferved affefted throughout, whilft; the other remained unchanged. The epidemic obferved at Paris in the year 1780 had this chara£ler. “ This epidemic (fays Fine!*) which was very general in Paris, ^ .r . and with which I was myfelf attacked, was remarkable *,pkic Phila* for it affefled almoft the whole mucous membranes, that of the trachea and bronchia;, the conjunctiva, thetom- u. pituitary membrane, the palate, the pharynx, and the ali-P- ao8, mentary canal.” The epidemic catarrh of 1752, deferibed in the Memoirs of the Medical Society of Edinburgh, is an example of the fame kind 5 for in all thefe, the mucous membrane lining the urinary and genital organs remained unaffefted. We alfo obferve that an irritation of any part of a mucous membrane frequently creates a pain on a part of the membrane which was Hot irritated. Thus a calculus

Chap. III. ' , , S.U R G Inflamma- cuius in tlie urinary bladder produces tlie chief pain tion of Mu- ,-^g p0int Gf the penis, and the preffure of worms in the cous Mem- inteft;nes produces an itching at the nofe. . . Among thefe phenomena, which are purely fympathetic, it is feldom that a partial irritation of one of the mucous furfaces produces pain in any part of the other. The lingular connexion which fubfifts between the membranes of the uterus and bronchite in mucous haemorrhagies, however, is an example of this kind. If the blood accidentally ceafe to flow from the one during menftruation, the other frequently fupplies the functions of the firft, and exhales it. In cafes of ftricture, or thickening and diforganization of the mucous membranes of the urethra, the ftomach is lometimes affe&ed : this may alfo arife from the fympathy of the two mucous membranes. Mucous membranes, from being conftantly expofed to the action of the external air, or to the contact of extraneous fubftances, do not fuller, when difplaced, like other parts of the animal economy. In a prolapfus of the uterus or reflum, their mucous furfaces lerve all the purpofes of Ikin ; and furrounding bodies do not produce more pain on them than on common Ikin. T. his is very different from the effefts produced on opening a cavity or a capfule of any joint. 1 he cellular, mufcular, nervous, glandular, and other fyItems, when laid open, prefent alfo very different phenomena. The mucous membrane, like the Ikin, isorganifed in {uch a manner as to endure, with impunity the contact of external bodies; thefe merely producing an increafed fecretion of thin mucus. A found introduced and retained in the bladder produces no alteration in the ftructure of the mucous membrane of the urethra j and for the fame reafon, a ftyle or tube can be kept in the lachrymal duft without cauling any irritation. Moll of the difeafes of mucous membranes come within the province of the furgeon j the others have been already treated of under the article Medicine. 54

49 E R Y. ... We have an example of inflammation affe&ing the Gonorrhoea, mucous membrane of the nofe in coryza, the ear in otitis, the urethra and vagina in gonorrhoea, the bladder in a catarrhus veficse, and the eye in the puriforra ophthalmia, the lachrymal fac or du£l in fiftula lacrymalis. In all thefe difeafes the fymptoms have a linking analogy, and are varied only from the difference in the funftions of the particular organ, the mucous covering of which has been affedted. During life, mucous membranes become gangrenous much more feldom than the Ikin. This is proved fronv the confequences of catarrh, compared with thofe of eryfipelas. There are, however, cafes where this texture dies, whilft thofe adjacent continue to live ; as in malignant angina.

Sect. II. Of the Inflammation of the Mucous Membrane of the Urethra.

55 The term gonorrhoea is employed to fignify a difcharge of puriform matter from the orifice of the ure-^^ thra or prepuce in men, and irom the vagina in women 'fcew'). whether it proceed from a fyphilitic or any other irritating caufe. The gonorrhoea may be defined a difeharge of a contagious, puriform fluid, which comes from the mucous glands of the urethra, and membrane which lines that canal; or from the glans in men, and the interior of the genital organs in women. I he difeafe feems to be produced by a virus fui generis. This difeafe generally makes its appearance in three or four days, fometimes in fix, but rarely later, after impure coition, with the following fymptoms. The patient finds a particular itching and difagreea’ble fenfation at the point of the yard, and a fort of flight itching alfo at the part of the urethra placed immediately under the frenum. This lalls one or two days, and on the fol- . lowing days the orifice of the urethra becomes fenfible and red ; it alfo fwells, and a limpid matter of a clear Sect. I. Inflammation of Mucous Membranes. yellow colour flows from it, which tinges the linen. The contact of extraneous and irritating fubffances, Whilft: the flow of this matter continues, the titillation acrid vapours, or the hidden expofure to cold air of any becomes ftronger and more painful, particularly in mamucous furface, is often followed by fome degree of in- king water j for this leaves a burning impreflion and fliarp pain in the affe&ed part. In fome individuals the flammation. A preternatural degree of rednefs is a-conftant fymp- firft: fymptom prefenting itfelf is the difeharge of a thick tom of inflammation in moil parts of the body *, but the mucus. In thefe cafes the patient feels from the commoft remarkable character of inflammation in mucous mencement a burning and painful fenfation in making membranes, and that which diflinguilhes it from all water. Thefe fymptoms generally increafe in three others, is the fecretion of a puriform fluid. The mu- or four days. Sometimes, however, that does not fencus, which in the natural llate is nearly tranfparent, fibly happen till after eight or twelve days. The glans and merely moiftens the furface, becomes of a yellow acquires a deep red livid colour j the difeharge through colour, and the quantity is fo abundant as to form a it increafes, and the matter becomes of a yellow, or purulent difehargf. It Js from the fufeeptibility of the greenifti yellow colour, refembling pus diluted. The mucous glands to be a£ted upon by any irritation fwelling of the glans, and alfo of the whole penis, bewhich is applied to the extremities of their dudls, comes confiderable •, the patient has frequently a defire that the Hone or any tumor of the bladder, polypi of to make water, and he finds, particularly when he has the nofe or vagina, are always accompanied by a profufe remained for fome time in bed lying on his back, frequent and involuntary erections, and fo painful that difeharge. The inflammation is accompanied with a more or lefs they diflurb his fleep, and oblige him to rife out of degree of thickening of the membrane j and fometimes bed. Such is ufually the progrefs of the difeafe when the inthis remains after all the inflammatory fymptoms ceafe. The abatement of the inflammation is marked by an in- flammation is Ample, flight, and fuperficial; but in many creafe in the thicknefs of the difeharge and a diminu- cafes the inflammation extends farther and penetrates more deeply, affecting the reticular fubftances of the tion in its quantity. G cavernous Vol. XX. Part I.

SURGERY. Chap. III. 50 gonorrhoea, cavernous bodies of the urethra. Then the pain be- between the fingers, and at laft the difcharge entirely Gonorrhoea. wjm. y„ i comes exceffive during erections, and the frenum of tha difappears. In other cafes, and thefe the molt frequent, glans is drawn downwards as by a cord, in luch a man- the inflammatory fymptoms difappear by degrees; but ner that the body of the penis is forced upwards by the the difcharge remains during weeks, months, or even violence of the erection. It is this which is called vears. It is this form of the difeafe which is called cordee. It fometimes happens, that in this ftate the gleet, or Amply blennorrhoea. Sometimes the inflammatory fymptoms difappear by veffels of the urethra are torn, and thus occafion conliderable hsemorrhagy. At other times, the difcharged degrees, and leave behind them in the urethra an ulcer, matter is mixed with ftreaks of blood ; the prepuce is from which there is a malignant and purulent difcharge, alfo fo mucli inflamed and fwelled that it cannot be and which occafions an affedtion of the fyftem. This is pulled back over the glans, or if it has been pulled what has been called gonorrhoea complicata or ulcerofa ; back, it cannot be again brought forwards. In fome but it occurs rarely. In other cafes a contradtion remains in the urethra; cafes the ftrangulation which accompanies this lafl: accident, produces a mortification of the glans, and even fometimes a paraphymofis continues, and fometimes occafions the death of the patient 5 this, however, fel- there is a tumor of the tefticles, a hardening of thefe parts or of fome of the glands of the urethra, an indom happens. In fome perfons one or more of the inguinal glands flammation of the proftate gland, with a more or lefs fwell, become painful, and are attended w-ith fymptoma- complete fuppreffion of urine; at other times, though tic fever. Often the glands of the penis fwell alfo, a very rarely, the difcharge, when fupprefled, produces cord or knots can be felt on the back of the penis, and fuddenly a perfedt deafnefs, or moft violent ophthal* Traits dt the Ikin is alfo fwelled and painful. Befides thefe fymp- mia *. The exciting caufe of fyphilitic gonorrhcea is always toms, the patient often feels, either from his own fault, or on account of bad treatment, a particular uneafy the application of the fpecific virus to fome part of thepar Swc. aching fenfation, with tenlion and fwelling of the fper- mucous membrane lining the urethra. The contagious d/awr« matic cord and teflicles, accompanied with a diminu- fluid, applied to any part of the body of a found perfon, tion, or even a complete fuppreffion of the difcharge by adts with more or lefs difficulty, according to the differthe urethra. In other cafes the difeafe makes greater ence in the ftrudlure, the greater or lefs debility of the progrefs } the irritation and inflammation itretching part, and alfo according to the particular conftitution along the canal of the urethra. All the fymptoms of the individual; for we fee people wh© are expofed to then become more violent, the pain which is felt in the every danger of infedtion, without ever having the difperinaeum or behind it, in making water, is fo violent, eafe even during their whole life. Perhaps alfo the that the patient is afraid to make the attempt, at the more or lefs violence of the adlion of the virus depends fame time that he is frequently folicited by the fometimes on the greater or lefs degree of acrimony of fatiguing tidilation at the neck of the bladder and the virus itfelf. anus. There is a perpetual deflre to let off the water, The feat of gonorrhoea, when it immediately proceeds whilft he can make no more than a few drops at a time from impure coition, is always at a fmall diftance from with a burning pain. The whole canal of the urethra the orifice of the urethra, under the frenum, at that is fwelled, and in a ftate of tenfion ; the patient has fre- part of the canal where we obferve a dilatation, called quent erections, and lancinating pains along the whole Jo/la navicu/aris. All gonorrhoeas which are fituated length of the canal, through the perinaeum and anus. more anteriorly on the cuvature of the penis, in the He cannot lie down for a long time, nor can he reft veru montanum, the neck of the bladder, or in the feated. In this ftate the fwelling of the glands of the bladder itfelf, arife from bad treatment, or from fome urethra, and the fpafmodic contraflion of its internal caufe which has flopped or fuppreffed the primary difmembrane, obftruft the free paffage of the urine, and charge. allow it to flow in a very thin bifurcated ftream, or drop Sometimes by the natural progrefs of the difeafe, and by drop ; and if at the fame time the difcharge dimi- more frequently from faults committed by the patient, iiifli confiderably, or totally flop, a complete fuppref- or by the effedts of improper remedies, the inflammation lion of urine fometimes fueceeds, occafioned by the in- and irritation are apt to change their place. They often flammation and ftri&ure of the neck of the bladder, or occupy the orifice of a mucous gland which opens at by the inflammation and fwelling of the proftate gland the firft turn of the penis. At other times they affedl and adjacent parts. the two glands of Cow'per. Sometimes they occupy the It fometimes happens that the inflammation of the protuberances which cover the orifices of the feminal urethra becomes fo violent, that its internal furface, and veficles; and they alfo fometimes take place in the the orificesof the glands which line it, fecrete nothing; proftate gland, or in the neck of the bladder. the fame as we obferve fometimes happens in inflammaIn fome rare cafes the contagious virus does not penetion of the mucous membrane of the nofe and of the trate during the inflammation into the urethra, but aplungs. It is this ftate of the difeafe which fome authors plied to the extremity of the penis, it fixes itfelf upon have defcribed under the name otgonorrhoea Jicca. the corona of the glans, and irritating the excretory dudts After thefe fymptoras have continued with more or lels of the febaceous glands there, produces a difcharge which violence, or when they have increafed during one, two, has been called the gonorrhoea of the glans. or three weeks, or even during fix or feven, according When the urethra of a perfon who has laboured under to the treatment employed, they begin gradually to di-. gonorrhoea is laid open, no ulcer is almoft ever found upon minilh. The difficulty and the frequent defire to make the furface of the internal membrane ; and in thofe who water ceafe; the eredtions are no longer painful; the have fuffered much in confequence of the difeafe, there setter acquires more confidence, and forms into threads is merely a thickening and contradtion of one or more parts,,,

S U R G E R Y. 51 Cliap. HI. OROrr lS 4 appeared; for if tve were to give ftp too foon the ufe of'J - ’ Gonorrhoea,J parts of the urethra. Sometimes, though very rarely, —V—■ excrefcences are formed within it. I he ducts of the thefe injections, the inflammation and difcharge would mucous glands are obliterated, and the prollate gland increafe. In this cafe it is neceffary to make the injection ftronger, and to ufe it more frequently. The adand bladder changed in their ftruaure. It has. been a matter of great difpute among thole vantages to be derived from this praCtice do not feem, •who have written on the venereal difeafe, whether the however, to be altogether confirmed ; and it is to be gonorrhoeal and venereal virus are the fame. In this wifhed that enlightened and prudent practitioners would controverfy a number of very futile arguments have make fome dccifive experiments to determine whether Specific na- been brought forward. It is a ftriking fa&, however, injeCtions are ufeful or hurtful in the commencement of tureofthe which the praftical man muft have always in view, gonorrhoea. When inflammation has taken place, and when the virus. t]iat tiie venereal difeafe is never cured without mercury ^ whilft a gonorrhoea, however virulent, never re- difcharge and other fymptoms of gonorrhoea are comquires that remedy. This difference in the treatment pletely formed, a different mode of treatment ought to of the difeafes fome authors have attempted to ex- be purfued. Repofe, abftinence from all kinds of irriplain, from the difference in the ftrufture of the parts tating food, fpiceries, wine, &.c. will contribute much affected. It is remarkable, however, that the matter to allay the irritation. In order to defend the irritable parts againft the acrid from the gonorrhoea never affeas the fkin, producing matter, and to moderate the fymptoms of inflammation, chancre ; but that when its virus is applied to the vagina, or to the urethra of another perfon, gonorrhoea is authors have recommended the ufe of mucilaginous, the confequence. When it affeds the prepuce too, it oily, and fedative applications. That which renders the produces, in place of chancre, a morbid difcharge from urethra in man fo violently affeCted by gonorrhoea, and, the febaceous glands of that organ. It is alio a 11 viking fb different from catarrh, is not from the difference of faa, in the htftory of gonorrhoea, that however long it ftruCture in the organ, which has been fuppofed to be may remain, it never produces any conftitutional affec- more irritable than the mucous membrane of the nofe tion. AH thefe circumftances in the hiftory of the dif- and other parts of the body. It is the falts of the urine eafe, in its progrefs and fymptoms, and in its cure, be- palling along the urethra, which keeps up the irritation ing fo didimilar to thofe of the venereal difeafe, are produced by the virus. It has been propofed, in order furely fufficient grounds to confider gonorrhoea and fy- to remedy this fource of irritation, to give gum arabic philis as two difHnft morbid affe£iions, and different or the infufion of linfeed internally j but thefe, when from one another as much as any two difeafes of the ani- taken in the neceffary quantities, generally injure the flomach. An infufion of hemp has been found by Swemal economy. Treatment.—All the forms of the venereal difeafe, diaur to anfwer all the purpofes, and not to be fubjeft il when they are left to themfelves, undermine and deftroy to the inconveniences of the others. This remedy may the conftitution •, but gonorrhoea ceafes without the re- be rendered more agreeable to take, by adding a little fources of art, particularly if during its comfe the pa- fugar to it j and in fome cafes a weak decoCtion of farfatient live a fober and regular life. The irritability of parilla may be advantageoufly added. All thefe drinks the urethra, the conftitution of the patient, the faults in fhould be taken cold, or at leaft nearly milk-warm, and his diet, and his exereife and choice of remedies, and in fmall dofes frequently repeated. The antiphlogiftic regimen muft alfo be purfued in perhaps alfo the nature of the virus itfelf, which is more or lefs acrid, and of which theattion will be more the treatment of gonorrhoea. The patient ought tc) or lefs violent, often renders gonorrhoea a very fevere avoid all exercife, or high-feafoned food. Lint, wet difeafe. Experience confirms, that the fooner proper with a faturnine folution, fhould be kept conftantly apremedies are applied, and the fooner the patient is plied to the penis ; and the patient ftiould keep his cured, the lefs he fuffers; and the more certainly he a- bowels open with faline purgatives. When the fympvoids the difagreeable accidents which are fo often the toms of inflammation are confiderable, and the pulfe ponfequence of that difeafe. From this confideration, hard and frequent, bleeding becomes neceffary, either it is evidently of importance, either to prevent the dif- general or topical : the conflant application of fomentaeafe entirely, or deftroy it in its beginning. Two tions and emollient poultices is alfo ufeful. Swediaur means have been propofed to accomplifh thefe ends j has advifed, that camphor and the nitrate of potath. one is, to remove the virus before it can aft on the parts ftiould be given internally, and this ihould be continued -oxpofed to it •, the other deftroys and alters its nature, according to its effeiffs. Camphor alone, taken in the and prevents thefe effefts from the moment that it gives form of emulfion with fugar or frefh egg, is an efficacious remedy in allaying the pain and ardor urince. The the firft figns of its aftion. Different practitioners have tried and recommended ufe of camphor has alfo been recommended externally, various prophylaftic remedies. Some have applied mer- with a view to allay the cordee. Thefe remedies ought to be continued as Idwg- as tire curial ointment upon the furface of the glans and prepuce, immediately after coition, and others different pain and fymptoms of inflammation in the urethra conkinds of lotions and injeftions, as cauftic alkali, lime tinue. After they are abated, the patient may be allowed water, alcohol diluted with water: thefe preparations a better diet, in order to prevent the urethra from being being injefted feven or eight times a-day, for feveral affefted with a chronic gonorrhoea or gleet. Injections made of the extraCt ©f opium with acetate of lead, applied days after the commencement of the difcharge. By the ufe of injeftions the irritation is diminifhed, frequently from the commencement of the difeafe, conand the progrefs of the inflammation flopped ; and when tribute much to fhortenr it, and allay the accompanying the difcharge becomes thicker during their ufe, they pain. Sometimes, how ever, even the moft mild injecought to Ire continued eight or ten ffays after it has dif- tions do harm, from a particular irritable ftate of tire G 2 urethra.

52 S U R G Gonorrhoea, urethra. Great advantage has alfo been obtained by » fome, in very aggravated cafes of the difeafe, by frictions of mercurial ointment on the perinaeum, and along the courfe of the urethra, or by mercurial fumigations applied to the genital organs, and even by the injection of mercurial ointment into the urethra. On the other hand, when the fymptoms of eryfipelatous inflammation prevail; when the patient is feeble, and of an irritable temperament j when he feels better after dinner ; when the difeharge is clear and profufe, accompanied with fharp pain, often lancinating throughout the whole urethra ; and if the pulfe is feeble and frequent, it is more advifeable to give him a lefs rigid diet j to allow him the moderate ufe of wine, and in fome cafes to give him opium and bark internally. We are fometimes furprifed at the fudden changes which thefe remedies in fuch cafes produce. The ufe of opium alfo contributes much to prevent cordee ; and in all cafes this ought to be avoided as much as poflible, by fixing the penis downwards, and in making the patient lie on his fide upon a mattrefs, which anfwers better than lying upon the back, and in a feather bed. If in confequence of the violence of the inflammation the difeharge flops, and the pofterior parts of the urethra begin to be affected, we fhould have recourfe to the warm bath, or apply vapours to the part, by placing the patient upon a veflfel containing boiling water, and this fhould be repeated three or four times a-day j the patient fhould keep his bed, and an emollient cataplafm applied upon the penis, which fhould be renewed every hour. All kinds of injeftions in fuch c^fes are hurtful. The fame treatment is alfo applicable when the difeharge is flopped by the ufe of acrid and aftringent injedtions, or by injedlions improperly ufed, or by the improper ufe of turpentine and balfams. When the proflate glands and the neck of the bladder are affedled, and the patient of a plethoric habit, it becomes neceflary to bleed profufely, either at the arm, or by applying a number of leeches to the perinaeum. In all thefe cafes, a fedative clyfler repeated every feven or eight hours, and a general or local warm bath ufed twice a-day, are the befl remedies which can be ufed. Sometimes a blifter applied to the perinaeum is alfo ufeful. The fwelling of the lymphatic glands of the groin which fometimes takes place, is purely fympathetic, and difappears along with the inflammatory fymptoms of the urethra. In all cafes of gonorrhoea the patient fhould wear a Plate fufpenfory bandage whilfl the difeafe continues *. It DXIV. is alfo ufeful to perfons who are obliged to take exercife, *g. 13. to wear a, convenient bandage round the penis, which may be united to the fufpenfory in fuch a manner, that the penis may be enclofed in a kind of cafe, and thus defended from external injuries, from cold, and from friftion •, this bandage being kept conflantly clean, by often changing the caddis, which is placed in its cavity. Tor this purpofe, a hole ftiould be left in the bag, covered by the caddis, which the patient can take” away each time he makes water. Another general precaution which it is ufeful to make, is never to keep the pep is bound up high, but to keep it low, in order that the matter may flow out freely, and may. not pafs back■wards along the urethra.

E R Y. Chap. III. The gonorrhoea which takes place In the glans and Gonorrhoea, prepuce is generally eafily cured, by injecting frequent-—v—^ ly warm milk between the glans and prepuce, and by keeping the penis in an emollient poultice. In thofe cafes where the prepuce is fo fwelled that it cannot be pulled back, we ought to have recourfe to fedative injeftions. It is a ufeful general rule, which ought to be obferved in all cafes of gonorrhoea, to touch the parts affe&ed as little and as feldom as poflible; and every time that it is touched, to wafh the hands immediately afterwards, and with the greateft care, fearing that, by carrying them unintentionally upon the eyes, nofe, &c. thefe organs might be inoculated with the difeafe. g Gonorrhoea in women is feldom followed by fo vio-jn women, lent fymptoms, or by fo fevere and dangerous confequences as in men. In fome cafes the fymptoms are fo flight, that they conceive the difeharge, particularly at its commencement, to be nothing but the whites, to which difeafe a great many are fubjedl, efpecially in the large towns of Europe. The gonorrhoea in women has been fuppofed by many authors to have its feat in the cavities of the urethra. This, however, will not be found to be the cafe. The difeafe is feated, either upon the clitoris, or on the orifice of the urethra; upon the nymphae, or in the cavity of the vagina j or even upon the inferior commiffure. With regard to the treatment, we have the fame in- Treatment dications to fulfil in gonorrhoea in women as in men, with this difference, that one can fee the change of ftru&ure in thefe parts, and thus, from the feat of the difeafe, employ proper inje6tions and lotions from the beginning. Precautions in ujing InjeElions.—The fyringe ufed in men for this purpofe ought to have a Ihort point of a conical form and of a thicknefs proportioned, that not more than its extremity may pafs into the orifice of the urethra*. The body of the fyringe fhould be perfeftly # Platfe cylindrical, and the pillon ought to play very accurate- DXIV. ly j for if the pitlon does not fit the body of the fy- fig-12* ringe, the injeflion, inffead of pafling into the urethra, regurgitates between the pifton and the fyringe. From the unfteadinefs of the motion of the pifton, the point of the fyringe is apt to move fuddenly on the urethra, and injure its thin and delicate membrane. To prevent any injury of this kind, we have employed with great advantage, particularly if the mouth of the fyringe is made of metal, a fmall ftrip of caddis wrapped in a fpiral manner round the mouth of the fyringe, fo as nearly to expofe its point. If the difeafe is feated near the point of the urethra, the patient ftiould be attentive to comprefs with one hand the urethra above the arch of the pubis, where the ferotum commences, whilft with the other hand he holds and guides the fyringe. The liquid ftiould be thrown in gently, and fo as (lightly to diftend the urethra ; the liquid is to be kept for a minute or two, and the fame operation repeated two or three times in fucceffion. '1 he liquid employed (hould always be ufed warm, which may be eafily done by filling a cup with the neceffary quantity, and placing the cup in a bafon of boiling water. It often happens, particularly in young people, that after

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53 SURGERY. Ceryza. hap. III. and three ounces of the balfam of copaiba, and was Gleet,. after having uft'd Inje£iions fome time ^with advan- two cured. taee they become lefs attentive xn ufxng them, and neSometimes the balfams, combined with tinfture of them even for a day. This omiffion is always fol- guaiac, or with kino, produce a defireable effe£l. lowed with bad confequences, the difeharge returning Among the corroborant or tonic remedies, the kino, with double force j and the patient is obliged to con- which we have already mentioned, is one of the. moft tinue the injections during fome weeks more than would ufeful} the cinchona alfo in powder or infufion in red have been neceffary, if the ufe of the remedy had not wine, or, which is ftill better, in lime water ; tormenbeen interrupted. tilla in powder, or in extraft, in the form of pills, joinIn order, therefore, to prevent die danger of a re- ed according to circumftances, with preparations^ of lapfe, it is always prudent to advife patients to inject iron. Glauber’s falls are ufeful and efficacious remedies. three, four, or even fix times a-day, if the circumftan- The tinflure of cantharides, given in a dofe from twenty ces demand it, and to continue the fame two or three to thirty drops, has often been found very beneficial. times a-day regularly for at leaft ten or fifteen days It is one, however, which ought to be given with preafter the difeharge has entirely ceafed. caution, as it might do much harm to people of a deliFor women the canula ought to be larger and longer. cate and irritable temperament. •A canula of ivory, an inch in diameter, and two or There are, however, cafes, where all our efforts to three inches in length, fixed to a bottle of elaftic gum, cure a gleet are fruitlefs ; and we fometimes fee, that * Plate is the moft convenient form of a fyringe *. nature alone can in time fucceed, after we have ufelefsDXIV. Of Gleet. ly tried all the refources of art. fig. 13There fometimes remains a fpecies of cordee or curIt very often happens, that after the fpecific inflam